Press Release: Veritas Press C.I.C.
Author: Kamran Faqir
Article Date Published: 23 Sept 2025 at 16:43 GMT
Category: UK | Politics | Farage’s Immigration Plans
Source(s): Veritas Press C.I.C. | Multi News Agencies
Nigel Farage has unveiled Reform UK’s immigration manifesto, vowing to abolish Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR), impose strict new cultural and salary thresholds, and launch a sweeping crackdown on migration. While hailed by right-wing media as a bold reset, experts say the proposals are neither workable nor original: they mirror far-right strategies that have destabilised societies from Mussolini’s Italy to Powell’s Britain.
The Policy Package:
Farage’s blueprint promises to:
- Scrap ILR, forcing even long-settled migrants to reapply for five-year visas.
- Impose an annual cap on visas, voted through Parliament.
- Raise salary thresholds for residency to around £60,000, nearly double the UK’s median wage (£31,602).
- Ban dual nationality and enforce “British Cultural Tests.”
- Deport all small boat arrivals under an expanded “UK Deportation Command,” modelled on the U.S. ICE agency.
“This is our last chance to save Britain from collapse,” Farage declared. “We must stop mass immigration before our services buckle and our identity disappears.”
Fascist Rhetoric In New Packaging:
Historians argue that while Farage dresses his message in parliamentary language, it recycles authoritarian patterns:
- Mussolini’s labour laws kept foreign workers permanently insecure, blocking pathways to settlement. Farage’s attack on ILR echoes this.
- Enoch Powell’s ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech warned of cultural annihilation, a theme revived in Farage’s claim that “whole areas no longer speak English.”
- Germany’s Gastarbeiter model created a “permanent underclass” by denying immigrants settlement, a system Farage now seems to emulate.
Dr. Amina Rahman, historian at SOAS, told us: “The policies are not about pragmatism. They follow a fascist script, restrict permanence, depict migrants as parasites, and weaponise culture to consolidate power.”
Britain’s Debt To Migrants:
What Farage conveniently ignores is Britain’s deep-rooted reliance on immigrant labour. After World War II, migrants arrived from the Caribbean, most famously the Empire Windrush generation, South Asia (India and Pakistan), and mainland Europe, including displaced Poles and Ukrainians. These workers were essential in staffing hospitals, running buses, and operating factories, literally rebuilding Britain from the rubble. By 2024, foreign-born staff made up nearly one in seven NHS employees, including almost 20% of nurses and 30% of doctors, according to NHS Digital, yet their vital contributions are routinely overlooked in anti-immigrant rhetoric.
Migrant workers also keep the social care system afloat: the Migration Advisory Committee reported that care providers would “collapse overnight” without foreign labour. Agriculture and construction likewise depend on seasonal and long-term migrant workers, jobs that Britons consistently reject due to low pay and harsh conditions.
“Britain was rebuilt on the backs of migrant workers,” said Saira Khan of Migrant Voice. “Farage’s rhetoric is not just divisive, it erases the very people who kept this country standing.”
Do The Numbers Add Up?
Reform UK claims its plan will save £234bn. Yet the think-tank it cites, the Centre for Policy Studies, has withdrawn that figure as “disputed.”
Jonathan Portes, former Treasury economist, said that properly read, Office for Budget Responsibility data shows migrants provide a net fiscal benefit of around £125bn in the coming years. Madeleine Sumption, director of Oxford’s Migration Observatory, noted that each high-earning migrant contributes £1m in lifetime net value to the UK economy.
Even Farage’s welfare claims don’t hold. As of July 2025, just 2.8% of Universal Credit claimants were people with ILR, costing £1.7bn, not the £9bn touted. “The maths simply doesn’t work,” Portes said. “Farage’s sums fall apart under scrutiny.”
The Human Cost:
Farage’s proposals could see 430,000 ILR holders thrown into limbo, many of whom have lived in Britain for decades, raised British-born children, and integrated fully.
Josephine Whitaker-Yilmaz of Praxis asked: “Would my Turkish husband be deported? Would our dual-national children be forced to leave, too? These policies tear families apart for no reason other than ideology.”
Risks To The Economy:
Farage insists bankers “won’t worry” about meeting thresholds. But immigration lawyers warn that uncertainty could push global talent elsewhere. Sophie Barrett-Brown, senior partner at Laura Devine Immigration, said: “If workers can’t put down roots, they’ll choose New York, Berlin or Toronto. Britain risks pricing itself out of the global skills market.”
Heather Rolfe of the British Future think tank called the plan “cruel and dangerous,” warning it would “wreck the NHS and cripple key industries.”
The Bigger Picture:
While Reform UK holds only a handful of MPs, its poll lead has shifted the political debate. Labour has already pledged to double the residency period before ILR eligibility to 10 years. The Conservatives, too, have edged rightwards. Farage’s “Overton Window” effect is clear: by normalising authoritarian rhetoric, he drags the political centre closer to the far-right fringe.
“Farage’s agenda is blinded by fascist rhetoric,” said Prof. Ellis, an expert on authoritarian regimes. “It scapegoats migrants, undermines Britain’s economic needs, and risks turning the UK into a hostile state for those who did everything legally.”
As Britain grapples with economic stagnation and public disillusionment, the danger is that Farage’s brand of populism, rooted in scapegoating rather than solutions, becomes policy. And that, as history shows, rarely ends well.
Farage’s Immigration Plan: A Threat To Britain’s Workforce And Economy.
Nigel Farage’s recent immigration manifesto, introduced by Reform UK, proposes significant changes to the UK’s immigration system, including the abolition of Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR), stricter cultural and salary thresholds, and annual visa caps. While these measures are presented as solutions to perceived pressures on public services, experts warn that they could have devastating effects on key sectors of the economy and the millions who rely on them.
The Policy Proposal:
Farage’s plan outlines several key changes:
- Abolition of ILR: Migrants would no longer have the automatic right to remain after five years, leading to uncertainty for long-term residents.
- Increased Salary Thresholds: Proposed salary requirements for residency would be set around £60,000, nearly double the UK’s median wage.
- Annual Visa Caps: Parliament would vote annually on the number of visas issued, potentially leading to arbitrary restrictions.
- Cultural and Security Tests: New assessments would be introduced to determine eligibility for settlement.
- Employer Penalties: Companies hiring migrants at lower wages could face fines, potentially discouraging employment in sectors reliant on migrant labour.
Economic And Sectoral Impact:
Migrant workers play an indispensable role in several critical sectors:
- NHS: Approximately 19% of NHS staff in England are non-British nationals, with over 70,000 EU nationals and 122,000 Asian nationals contributing to the workforce. These individuals are vital in filling staffing shortages and maintaining healthcare services.
- Social Care: Migrants constitute about 32% of adult care workers in England, with many coming from countries like Nigeria, India, and Zimbabwe. They are essential in providing care to the elderly and disabled, particularly as the UK faces an ageing population.
- Agriculture: The UK requires up to 60,000 seasonal workers annually for harvesting, predominantly sourced from outside the UK. These workers are crucial for maintaining food production and supply chains.
- Construction: Migrants make up approximately 13.9% of the construction workforce, with higher concentrations in London. They are integral to meeting the demand for housing and infrastructure development.
Fiscal Contributions:
Contrary to the narrative that migrants are a financial burden, studies indicate they contribute positively to the UK’s economy:
- Skilled Migrants: The Migration Advisory Committee reports that skilled migrants have a net positive fiscal impact, averaging £16,300 per year, surpassing the £800 contribution of the average UK-born adult.
- Lifetime Contributions: Migrants arriving at age 25 and earning the UK average wage are projected to have a more positive lifetime fiscal contribution than UK-born individuals, due to the UK not bearing their childhood education costs.
Potential Consequences Of Farage’s Plan:
Implementing Farage’s proposed policies could lead to:
- Labour Shortages: Key sectors like healthcare, social care, agriculture, and construction could face significant staffing deficits, impacting service delivery and economic stability.
- Economic Decline: The loss of skilled workers and the imposition of higher salary thresholds could reduce the UK’s tax revenue, potentially leading to increased public spending to fill gaps.
- Social Unrest: The uncertainty created by the abolition of ILR and the introduction of cultural tests could lead to social divisions and unrest, as communities feel marginalised.
Conclusion:
Farage’s manifesto is not merely a set of policy proposals; it is a blueprint for disruption, dressed in the language of patriotism but rooted in exclusion and historical amnesia. While Farage’s immigration plan aims to address concerns about public service pressures, the proposed measures could have far-reaching negative effects on the UK’s economy and society. Migrant labour has long been the backbone of the NHS, social care, agriculture, and construction industries that would face collapse under these measures. The reliance on migrant labour in essential sectors highlights the need for policies that support integration and recognise the contributions of all workers, rather than creating divisions and uncertainty. The economic data is clear: migrants provide a net fiscal benefit, contribute millions in lifetime value, and fill roles that British-born workers routinely reject.
Yet Farage’s plan ignores this reality, instead reviving patterns of authoritarian scapegoating reminiscent of Mussolini’s Italy, Powell’s rhetoric, and Germany’s Gastarbeiter system, policies designed to create insecurity, dependence, and social division. For hundreds of thousands of long-settled migrants, these proposals would mean uncertainty, family separation, and forced liminality, while the UK risks losing vital talent to more welcoming nations.
History shows that populist campaigns built on fear rarely resolve societal challenges; they compound them. Farage’s agenda, if normalised, could drag Britain toward economic fragility, social unrest, and a hostile environment for those who have long contributed to its prosperity. The question is not whether these policies are politically bold; they clearly are, but whether Britain is willing to gamble its workforce, economy, and international reputation on rhetoric that erases the very people who helped build the country.
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