Net migration to the United Kingdom (UK) has reached a “new record high” under the so-called Conservative Party, according to the latest figures published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
The UK – which has a total land mass smaller than many American states, and a far higher population density – saw net migration rise to a staggering 745,000 in the year ending December 2022, followed by another 672,000 in the year ending June 2023.
The previous estimate for the year ending December 2022 was 606,000. The revised figure of almost 150,000 arrivals has been attributed to “unexpected patterns” in the behavior of migrants.
NEW. Net migration in the UK soars to 672,000
Net migration by year:
1992 49,000
1994 94,000
1995 127,000
1996 116,000
–New Labour elected–
1997 107,000
1998 162,000
1999 187,000
2000 220,000
2001 220,000
2002 241,000
2003 239,000
2004 349,000
2005 293,000…— Matt Goodwin (@GoodwinMJ) November 23, 2023
The deputy director of migration statistics, Jay Lindop, asserts that “Net migration to the UK has been running at record levels, driven by a rise in people coming for work, increasing numbers of students and a series of world events.”
Indeed, the Conservative Party, led by social liberal Rishi Sunak, has issued more than 1.1 million residency visas to those either inside or outside of the European Union looking to work or study in the country over the past 12 months.
Sunak’s party, despite continuously promising to cut migration, has encouraged millions of people to migrate to the UK since it came into office under anti-Brexit former Prime Minister David Cameron in 2010. And, at current rates, will not reduce net migration to pre-Covid pandemic levels of around 374,000 until at least 2027.
The majority of the party’s rhetoric and focus has been on “stop[ping] the boats” carrying tens of thousands of illegal migrants across the English Channel. Yet, even then, it was unsuccessful and was recently blocked from sending several hundred asylum seekers to Rwanda by the UK Supreme Court.
Today, we've published provisional long-term migration estimates for the UK, year ending June 2023.
▪️ Immigration was 1.2m
▪️ Emigration was 508,000
▪️ Provisional net migration (difference between people arriving and people leaving) was 672,000➡️ https://t.co/X0ZCI9Ln5H pic.twitter.com/7qJ5Vy63JO
— Office for National Statistics (ONS) (@ONS) November 23, 2023