In a joint letter with 11 other conservative leaders, the Prime Minister urges greater labour mobility within the European Union to help people move abroad to places with the best job opportunities.
Mr Cameron has claimed that mass immigration in Britain has led to discomfort and promised voters that he will bring immigration down to the tens of thousands.
Hundreds of thousands of migrant workers from Eastern Europe have settled in Britain since countries such as Poland joined the European Union.
However, Mr Cameron is now leading a coalition of countries claiming that Europe should have a more integrated open labour market.
The European leaders, including the prime ministers of Italy, Ireland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Latvia, want migrants to settle where there are jobs amid high unemployment rates across the continent.
#3
Trading changing a few diapers for having tons of drinks and fun in your twenties just isn't in the Euro genome any more, even if it means extinction.
No kids = this sort of thing.
Posted by: no mo uro ||
02/21/2012 5:37 Comments ||
Top||
#4
Intra-European labor exchange is actually a good thing for the Europeans: it gets the motivated Europeans into the countries that need the labor to get the drab work done. And it keeps the Labour/Social Democrat parties in Europe from bringing in hundreds of Muslim Third World stealth jihadists to do the same work. Other than Albania and Bosnia, there are not major European native Muslim populations, and the Albanians and Bosnians have demonstrated little tolerance for the radical mullah types in their countries. UNLIKE all of Arab North Africa.
More than 500,000 people were allowed into Britain unchecked due to the repeated suspension of vital checks, opening up an "unacceptable" breach in the country's defences against terrorists and criminals, an official investigation has found.
At times immigration staff acted potentially illegally by relaxing the supervision of travellers entering this country at least 15,000 times in the last five years, John Vine, the independent inspector of the Border Agency, found.
This was the Labour plan to hold power for a long time, by opening the doors and bringing in many new immigrants who would be grateful and vote for them.
Such was the confusion and mismanagement uncovered that Mr Vine raised concerns about security during the London Olympics.
His report, published yesterday afternoon, left Theresa May, the Home Secretary, facing fresh questions about her grip on border security and the Coalition's failure to get a grip on problems she claimed had began under Labour.
Labour accused her of "hiding from her responsibilities" by blaming her staff after figures showed the number of times that restrictions were relaxed increased significantly after the Coalition came to power in May 2010.
The staff being a lot of Labour hold-overs, I'm guessing...
Mr Vine last night said that ministers, senior officials and border staff must all share the blame for potential security breaches.
The 84-page report paints a picture of confusion, mismanagement and miscommunication.
"Overall, I found poor communication, poor managerial oversight and a lack of clarity about roles and responsibilities," he concluded.
Mrs May responded to the report by announcing that the UK Border Force would be split off from the UK Border Agency and made directly accountable to ministers. She also told MPs that the problems began under Labour.
"There is no getting away from the fact that UKBA, of which the Border Force is part, has been a troubled organisation since it was founded in 2008," she said.
However, Mr Vine's report suggested that relaxations of border checks have been more frequent and widespread under the Coalition.
#3
Yep, allowing all those German tribe across the Rhine into the Roman Empire worked out OK for someone.
We could take up a collection to promote repatriation of former inhabitants of the Roman province of Hispania if a projection of a population shortage is an issue.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.