Close Menu
CCMECCME
  • Home
  • Who are we
    • CCME
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups
  • News
    • News of the council
    • News of Moroccan migration
    • News of migration in the world
  • Interviews
  • Archives of the council
    • Activities
    • Media and migration
    • News
  • Resources
  • Contact us
  • Share a contribution
  • Home
  • Who are we
    • CCME
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups
  • News
    • News of the council
    • News of Moroccan migration
    • News of migration in the world
  • Interviews
  • Archives of the council
    • Activities
    • Media and migration
    • News
  • Resources
  • Contact us
  • Share a contribution
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
CCMECCME
  • English
    • العربية
    • Français
  • Home
  • Who we are
    • CCME
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups
  • News
    • News of the Council
    • News of migration in the world
    • News of Moroccan migration
  • Resources
Partager une tribune شارك بمساهمة Share a contribution
  • Spécial SIEL 2025
  • Programmation
  • Axes
    • Voix des amériques
    • Maroc-Belgique: Histoire, Migrations et commémorations
    • Migrations et sciences sociales : où en est la recherche sur les migrations marocaines ?
    • Écritures féminines au maroc et dans l’immigration
  • Rencontres
    • Rencontres et débats
    • Rencontres philosophiques
    • Cinéma une rétrospective des films pionniers du cinéma marocain sur l’émigration/immigration
  • Vient de paraitre
  • Hommages
CCMECCME
  • English
    • العربية
    • Français
  • Spécial SIEL 2025
  • Programmation
  • Axes
  • Rencontres
  • Vient de paraitre
  • Hommages
Home»Archives of the council»Media and migration

The Guardian view on immigration: it’s not more talk we need, it’s more honesty

Media and migration 24 March 2015
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email WhatsApp Copy Link
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email WhatsApp Copy Link

It is sometimes claimed that there has been no discussion about immigration. On the contrary, for at least a generation it has been talked about relentlessly.

It is just that the conversation has never been very constructive. As a result it has often resembled a dialogue of the deaf, where the only common factor has been an offhand cruelty to every man or woman who has ever come to the UK to build a better life and finds themselves part of “them” and not of “us”. As many of the voices we publish in G2 today show, it is very easy to let even the most talented people making the most prominent contribution feel unwanted.

But for some, immigration raises atavistic fears. It challenges identity. With the best of intentions, progressive politicians watching the rise of racist parties elsewhere in Europe long ignored or denied that truth. Other politicians have exploited it, often in language that resonates with a biblical sense of apocalypse. In our immigration special today, David Blunkett, the former home secretary, apologises for using the word “swamped” in 2003. But by then, William Hague had already warned that Labour, a party he accused of “despising” the people, would let Britain become “a foreign land”. Two years later, Michael Howard, in the infamous “Are you thinking what we’re thinking?” poster, repeated the implication that Labour was running a conspiracy against the people. Labour had been framed as the people’s enemy.

No wonder that, in his first conference speech as leader in 2007, Gordon Brown blundered into promising British jobs for British workers. But already there was a divorce between the political rhetoric and the actual experience of a growing number of voters. Far from helping make sense of the world and chart a course through it, facts were obscured or misrepresented. The political environment was poisoned. Goodwill is important, but honesty matters more.

In our Long Read this morning, we set out the facts. First, there was no plot to expand the workforce in order to stoke up economic growth. Tony Blair and the people around him in Downing Street grew increasingly concerned about immigration as they wrestled with the unpredictable and sometimes catastrophic impact of the crumbling world order – the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan, the increasingly oppressive rule of Saddam in Iraq and of Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe all contributed to unprecedented pressure on the asylum system. As it creaked to a halt under the strain, it became vulnerable to abuse. For a time, the very right to asylum seemed under threat.

Then in 2004 came EU expansion and the accession of the A8, the countries that had formerly been in the Soviet bloc. Britain was ill prepared for a world where skilled workers were free to move for higher pay, particularly after Germany imposed transitional restrictions. The impact on housing, schools and local GP surgeries was severe. In Barking in east London, the BNP looked poised to take power. The fightback of its MP, Margaret Hodge, with its emphasis on talking to the white working class, was itself dismissed as racist, making it even harder to reassure existing populations while reconciling them with their new neighbours. And then the Tory framing of the debate legitimised a more extreme populism – and led to the rise of Ukip.

The (relatively) easy part is dealing with the policy questions that arise. Migration, as we reported on Friday, does produce growth from which the whole country benefits in the form of a bigger tax take. But it sometimes comes at the expense of local populations in pay and conditions as well as services, particularly when economic times are hard. Investment in the public goods paid for by economic growth should be the upside of a globalised work force.

The hard bit is the stuff that money can’t buy. The worst of the lack of a rational discourse about migration is the way it has damaged social democracy and jeopardised the sense of mutual obligation on which it depends. There are practical measures that will help. Recognising entitlement by renewing the contributory principle in benefits payments is one. Acknowledging the strengths of diversity is another. None of this is easy. But honesty is surely the first step.

Source: The Guardian

Related Posts

Paris Attacks: the intellectuals’ forecasts that we did not heed

30 November 2015

United States: Moroccan Taxi driver shot in the back on Thanksgiving Day

30 November 2015

Refugees welcome? How UK and Germany compare on migration

3 September 2015

Migration crisis: pressure mounts on Cameron over refugees

3 September 2015

Hundreds of migrants protest at Budapest station, want to go to Germany

3 September 2015

EU refugee crisis: World mourns Syrian toddler as Andy Burnham calls for emergency Parliament debate

3 September 2015

Our latest news

Marrakech: The “Trophées Marocains du monde” honors Moroccan diaspora

Marrakech: The “Trophées Marocains du monde” honors Moroccan diaspora   

12 May 2025
L'Espagne et le Maroc prévoient une augmentation du nombre d'utilisateurs de l'opération « Traversée du détroit 2025 »

 Spain and Morocco hold  the 36th Spanish-Moroccan Joint Commission meeting 

8 May 2025
المهاجرون الجدد يعوضون تراجع السكان الإسبان

Spain’s population reaches a record due to foreign residents

8 May 2025
شروط جديدة للحصول على الجنسية الفرنسية

France: A circular to tighten citizenship rules

6 May 2025

النشرة الإخبارية

اشترك لتلقي آخر الأخبار

قم بتنزيل تطبيق المجلس

ولا تنس تفعيل الإشعارات للحصول على آخر الأخبار!

Download CCME books for Android
Download CCME books for IOS
Logo CCME
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

المجلس

  • Who we are
  • The President
  • The General Secretary
  • Working groups

الأخبار

  • News
  • News of Moroccan migration
  • News of migration in the world
موارد
اتصل بنا
  • محج الرياض. ش 10 ص.ب 21481 - حي الرياض - الرباط 10000 - المغرب
  • contact@ccme.org.ma
  • +212 5 37 56 71 71 اتصل بنا​

2025 - © المجلس

  • Right of access to information
  • Terms of use
  • Contact us

Newsletter

Subscribe to receive the latest news

Download the CCME app

And don’t forget to activate notifications to receive the latest news!

Download CCME books for IOS
Download CCME books for Android
Logo CCME
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
CCME
  • Who we are
  • The President
  • The General Secretary
  • Working groups
News
  • News
  • News of Moroccan migration
  • News of migration in the world
Resources
Contact
  • Mahaj Ryad. Imm 10. B.P 21481 - Hay Ryad - Rabat 10 000 - Morocco
  • contact@ccme.org.ma
  • +212 5 37 56 71 71
© 2025 - CCME
  • Right of access to information
  • Terms of use
  • Contact us

Revue de presse

Abonnez-vous pour recevoir notre revue de presse

    Téléchargez l’application CCME

    Et n’oubliez pas d’activer les notifications pour recevoir les dernières actualités!

    Download CCME books for IOS
    Download CCME books for Android
    Logo CCME
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

    CCME

    • Who we are
    • The President
    • The General Secretary
    • Working groups

    Actualités

    • News
    • News of Moroccan migration
    • News of migration in the world

    Ressources

    Contact

    • Mahaj Ryad. Imm 10. B.P 21481 - Hay Ryad - Rabat 10 000 - Maroc
    • contact@ccme.org.ma
    • +212 5 37 56 71 71

    © 2025 - CCME

    • Right of access to information
    • Terms of use
    • Contact us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.