You're Father Of Policy That INCREASED immigration

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  • čas přidán 27. 05. 2024
  • Trevor Phillips interviewed Nigel Farage on Sky News on Sunday and it was a full of fireworks. But Phillips did manage, albeit quietly, to hold Nigel Farage to account for #brexit and what it is ensuring for immigration - immigration which Farage continues to use as a hook to cause division and hatred.
    #britishfarming
    #food
    #britishpolitics
    #britain
    #savebritishfarming

Komentáře • 758

  • @boxingday11
    @boxingday11 Před měsícem +134

    The biggest grifter of all time, is our Mr Farage.

    • @davidwebb4451
      @davidwebb4451 Před měsícem

      I think Farage's mate Trump is marginally worse.

    • @blue_jay31
      @blue_jay31 Před měsícem +3

      Thank you !

    • @kimwit1307
      @kimwit1307 Před měsícem +6

      Yes, I always refer to him as Farage the Grifter because he is the greatest grifter in UK history.

    • @paddymeboy
      @paddymeboy Před měsícem

      I don't see how Brexit is increasing immigration though? It was basically irrelevant to it. Immigration has increased after Brexit, but that's caused by global factors not Brexit itself.

    • @paddymeboy
      @paddymeboy Před měsícem

      @@kimwit1307 Ah...well chosen name, then.

  • @user-bw5pn4qv9i
    @user-bw5pn4qv9i Před měsícem +50

    People who voted Brexit have no right to complain.

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      Leavers handed the Tories autonomous powers over our borders. The Tories have been too scared to used them, too scared of the EU, the French, the Muslim lobby and Liberal Lefties like the prats on here. We have no need to take in a single migrant from Calais. They are in a safe country already, along with the other 4 million migrants in France.

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem +2

      I'm not, I've been in a permenant good mood since 2016.

    • @user-bw5pn4qv9i
      @user-bw5pn4qv9i Před měsícem +4

      @@markperrin8098 Good for you mate. I'm glad some people are happy at least.

    • @rogerbarrett9920
      @rogerbarrett9920 Před měsícem +5

      @@markperrin8098 - Ah - your many posts keep telling us this, Can you actually make a list of those sunny uplands that Brexit has brought the UK. or are you just a keyboard clown bent on winding people up - Come on, list the benefits - Because I can think of plenty of things that we have lost since the voters believed the spiel that was spouted out by the Leave campaigners.

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem +1

      @@rogerbarrett9920This is a stupid question, if Brexit cured can cer you would moan about job losses at Marie Curie and increase pension costs.🤣
      I'm constantly posting brilliant Brexit benefits, but remainers have special flaps in their ears that involuntarily shut whenever one is mentioned.

  • @zigglewigler
    @zigglewigler Před měsícem +91

    Mr Fartage did say that if Brexit was a failure he would leave the UK.

    • @eucitizen78
      @eucitizen78 Před měsícem +16

      It is not so easy anymore to live in the EU for the British. No freedom of movement anymore. Do you remember?

    • @noelfleming3567
      @noelfleming3567 Před měsícem +13

      And he admitted brexit failed 😅

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem +3

      @@noelfleming3567 You do understand quote mining is a form of lying right?

    • @flabbybum9562
      @flabbybum9562 Před měsícem

      We don't have Brexit.

    • @blue_jay31
      @blue_jay31 Před měsícem +2

      One can only hope one day ?

  • @robertallen591
    @robertallen591 Před měsícem +73

    he increased imigration and screwed the torries for a generation,, brilliant effort

    • @bigkanuna
      @bigkanuna Před měsícem

      The Socialist Nationalists in Germany would confiscate Jewish wealth. When they ran out of Jews, they started going after the rich Germans wealth. Socialist Marxists did the same thing with the Kulaks

  • @tauIrrydah
    @tauIrrydah Před měsícem +55

    He's 'never wrong' which means he's totally wrong all the time.

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      Leavers handed the Tories autonomous powers over our borders. The Tories have been too scared to used them, too scared of the EU, the French, the Muslim lobby and Liberal Lefties like the prats on here. We have no need to take in a single migrant from Calais. They are in a safe country already, along with the other 4 million migrants in France.

    • @derekmab7734
      @derekmab7734 Před měsícem +1

      He is right in his own world.

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      @@derekmab7734 Are you maybe suggesting that Brexit is such a success story that migrants are actively fleeing the European Union to get here?

    • @markblance8492
      @markblance8492 Před 26 dny

      He is a deluded fool

  • @jeangeldof2383
    @jeangeldof2383 Před měsícem +21

    As a Belgian who loves Britain i em SO SAD when i see this men !!
    He has ruined Britain with his nonsens and he still can't give up !!
    Sorry,my English in not perfect,but my heart is with you

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem +1

      Belgium isnt even a real country.

    • @user-im4tj2qt3d
      @user-im4tj2qt3d Před měsícem +1

      He is our Trump.

    • @Kidderman2210
      @Kidderman2210 Před měsícem +5

      @@markperrin8098 Really? So why did the UK go to war in 1914?

    • @jeangeldof2383
      @jeangeldof2383 Před měsícem +1

      @@markperrin8098 And what difference dus that make regarding Mr Farage

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem +1

      @@jeangeldof2383 Stick to reading Poirot, Nigel is our hero🇬🇧

  • @dondoodat
    @dondoodat Před měsícem +69

    We never had "an open door immigration policy" when we were in the EU.
    We weren't part of Schengen and even if we had have been Belgium and Italy regularly deport EU Citizens who don't have the money or employment to stay in their countries.
    A power we had and didn't use, because it would have lessened the 'need' for Brexit.

    • @JohnnyHague
      @JohnnyHague Před měsícem +6

      Not only that, but we could also have controlled access to benefits (which the likes of Farage assured us was some kind of burden). The problem we have, is that many are non-contributory. That is to say, that merely being a resident is qualification enough. For example, if you sign-on to find work, you are eligible for a reduced-rate benefit, even if you have never worked at all. By making these contributory, we could have scotched the idea of someone just rocking-up etc. Of course, we would also have to make them contributory for Brits as well - and no politician would touch that.

    • @paulholdstock4751
      @paulholdstock4751 Před měsícem

      My goodness Farage thinks the Brits are idiots. Why does he even get air time. He's an intelligent guy supported by idiots.

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      Leavers handed the Tories autonomous powers over our borders. The Tories have been too scared to used them, too scared of the EU, the French, the Muslim lobby and Liberal Lefties like the prats on here. We have no need to take in a single migrant from Calais. They are in a safe country already, along with the other 4 million migrants in France.

    • @oskarh5060
      @oskarh5060 Před měsícem +1

      Not only that. A points based system could have been implemented before brexit, just not for EU citizens, and there were certainly limits that could have been placed on them.
      Not that it matters anymore.

    • @scarfholdgraphicsmedia9501
      @scarfholdgraphicsmedia9501 Před měsícem +1

      ​@@oskarh5060we had a points based system a long time before Brexit.

  • @birdinthebush
    @birdinthebush Před měsícem +16

    I am a Spanish Hospital Operating Department Practitioner, trained at Guys and St Thomas in London and with over 35 years experience in the field, working in the UK and Holland. I believe there is now a great demand for my skills. Listening to all that talk about immigrants and immigration, I would still consider coming to the UK to work, but they would have to put my balls in a vise first.

    • @Kidderman2210
      @Kidderman2210 Před měsícem +3

      True. The truth is the UK is short of skilled workers like yourself, not just in the health service, but also agriculture, hospitality etc. In addition, the UK now depends on services such as education for revenue. Overseas students in the UK largely pay their own way and spend money in the UK. Unfortunately, the right wing media and the Brexiteers have made immigration such a toxic issue. Even trying to reduce immigration is a folly.

  • @EzechuHeadd
    @EzechuHeadd Před měsícem +197

    Hallelujah!!!! The daily jesus devotional has been a huge part of my transformation, God is good 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻was owning a loan of $47,000 to the bank for my son's brain surgery (David), Now I'm no longer in debt after I invested $8,000 and got my payout of m $270,500 every months,God bless Christy Fiore 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸..

    • @YvesAlexandre-ov2td
      @YvesAlexandre-ov2td Před měsícem

      Hi that's good you have idea &share to those who deserve it that's great god bless🙏🙏

    • @PanagosHaire
      @PanagosHaire Před měsícem

      She's a licensed broker here in the states🇺🇸 and finance advisor.

    • @PanagosHaire
      @PanagosHaire Před měsícem

      After I raised up to 525k trading with her I bought a new House and a car here in the states🇺🇸🇺🇸 also paid for my son's surgery….Glory to God, shalom.

    • @AthensPatao
      @AthensPatao Před měsícem

      Can I also do it??? My life is facing lots of challenges lately

    • @Mallinson-zt9ou
      @Mallinson-zt9ou Před měsícem

      I've always wanted to be involved for a long time but the volatility in the price has been very confusing to me. Although I have watched a lot of CZcams videos about it but I still find it hard to understand

  • @roddychristodoulou9111
    @roddychristodoulou9111 Před měsícem +19

    I agree with Trevor Philips , there's no way Farage did not know that if we left the EU migration into the UK would increase dramatically .

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      Yes, right, so many people so desperate to escape the European Union that they are prepared to pay people traffickers to put them in an overcrowded dinghy on a Calais beach and risk their lives in the open sea!

  • @TigerP1
    @TigerP1 Před měsícem +46

    Why is Farage still on TV and radio?? He is nothing.

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem +1

      You are nothing.

    • @Tas17.4
      @Tas17.4 Před měsícem

      ​@@markperrin8098nonce lover

    • @kimwit1307
      @kimwit1307 Před měsícem +5

      He's the UK's biggest grifter ever.

    • @cgwal
      @cgwal Před měsícem +1

      We are nothing and yet here we are. Oh well, get on with it and enjoy the show

    • @thedrumdoctor
      @thedrumdoctor Před měsícem

      Other than self-promotion, what else has he got to do during working hours?

  • @Ianmundo
    @Ianmundo Před měsícem +13

    the UK was always lucky to get European immigrants, now they receive what they really deserve, immigrants from the former British Empire 🇬🇧

  • @glenparker8458
    @glenparker8458 Před měsícem +13

    The thing is Nigel blames everyone else bar himself he was the one who instigated it

  • @robertbose990
    @robertbose990 Před měsícem +14

    The great thing about our Nige is that it's always someone else's fault. He wanted the hardest of Brexits. He knew that the Europeans would go home and would be replaced by others who were more likely to be non-white.

  • @micheldelacave9648
    @micheldelacave9648 Před měsícem +12

    The undertaker of Great Britain

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      The saviour.

    • @rogerbarrett9920
      @rogerbarrett9920 Před měsícem +1

      @@SJG-nr8uj - Hahahahaha - are you on drugs?

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      @@rogerbarrett9920 The European Union wishes to provide you with the following information.
      1. THE EU’s FEDERAL INTENTIONS
      Lisbon Treaty Article 3.4: “The Union shall establish an ECONOMIC and monetary UNION whose currency is the euro.”
      EU Five Presidents’ Report, 2015: “Progress MUST HAPPEN on four fronts: first, towards a genuine ECONOMIC UNION that ensures each economy has the structural features to prosper within the Monetary Union. Second, towards a FINANCIAL UNION that guarantees the integrity of our currency across the Monetary Union and increases risk-sharing with the private sector. This means completing the Banking Union and accelerating the Capital Markets Completing Europe’s Economic and Monetary Union. Third, towards a FISCAL UNION that delivers both fiscal sustainability and fiscal stabilisation. And finally, towards a POLITICAL UNION that provides the foundation for all of the above through genuine democratic accountability, legitimacy and institutional strengthening.”
      Angela Merkel’s immediate response to the referendum result, 24th June 2016: “Today is a watershed moment for Europe, and it is a watershed moment for the EUROPEAN UNIFICATION PROCESS. There is no doubt that this is a blow to Europe, and to the EUROPEAN UNIFICATION PROCESS.”
      EU Rome Declaration, 25th March 2017: “Working towards COMPLETING the ECONOMIC and monetary UNION” (with a preferred deadline for completion of 2027).
      ECB’s ‘Fiscal Implications of the EU Recovery Package’ 2020. “The way that the EU has responded to the crisis also has implications for the future design and implementation of the EUROPEAN GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK. First, while expansionary fiscal policy is necessary to sustain the recovery, going forward it will be important for the fiscal rules to effectively support the reduction of high government debt in good economic times. Second, NGEU constitutes a new and innovative element of the EUROPEAN FISCAL FRAMEWORK. It will result in the issuance of sizeable supranational debt over the coming years, and its establishment has signalled a political readiness to design a common fiscal tool when the need arises. This innovation, while a one-off, could also imply lessons for ECONOMIC and Monetary UNION, which still lacks a PERMANENT FISCAL CAPACITY AT SUPRANATIONAL LEVEL for macroeconomic stabilisation in deep crises. The review of the ECONOMIC GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK, which was launched by the Commission in February 2020 and postponed because of the pandemic, provides a GOOD OPPORTUNITY TO INCORPORATE THESE IMPORTANT CONSIDERATIONS.” (NGEU stands for “Next Generation European Union”).
      From the EU’s own website: “Once the economic and financial crisis (of 2008/9) was overcome, the EU established a process aimed at reinforcing the architecture of EMU (ECONOMIC and monetary UNION). The process is based on the Five Presidents’ Report on Completing Europe’s Economic and Monetary Union of 2015, which focused on four main issues:
      • A genuine ECONOMIC UNION;
      • A FINANCIAL UNION;
      • A FISCAL UNION;
      • A POLITICAL UNION.
      These four unions are STRICTLY INTER-RELATED and would develop in parallel. The report was followed by a series of communications, proposals and measures, and the discussion is still ongoing.”
      In 2022 all member states reaffirmed their commitment to economic union, as part of Lisbon Treaty Article 3.
      From the EU’s website (dated 29/4/24): “Today the Council adopted three pieces of legislation that will reform the EU’s ECONOMIC AND FISCAL GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK.
      ‘The main objective of the reform is to ensure sound and sustainable public finances, while promoting sustainable and inclusive growth in all member states through reforms and investment.
      The new legislation will significantly improve the existing framework and provide effective and applicable rules for all EU countries. They will safeguard balanced and sustainable public finances, increase the focus on structural reforms and investments to spur growth and job creation throughout the EU. The time is now for a swift implementation’: Vincent Van Peteghem, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance of Belgium.”
      2. THE EU’S MILITARY INTENTIONS
      Lisbon Treaty Article 42.3: “Member states shall make civilian and MILITARY capabilities available to the Union for the implementation of the common security and defence policy, to contribute to the objectives DEFINED BY THE EUROPEAN COUNCIL.”
      The EU’s military headquarters is the Kortenberg Building in Brussels.
      The EU Global Strategy, 30th June 2016, issued exactly one week after the referendum, contains the right of the EU’s military “to act autonomously (of NATO) if and when necessary”.
      It will need this, because, as you should know, Lisbon Treaty Article 42 commits member states to the defence of a member under attack. So if Ukraine is still under attack when it joins the EU, it will be the EU which is at war with Russia, not NATO. The defence of Ukraine doesn’t trigger the NATO charter.
      On 19th February 2019 Federica Mogherini told an audience in Hamburg: “... all the way through the security spectrum, up to the military operations, because not so many know that the European Union has seventeen deployed missions and operations around the world. So, together, we are already a unique global security provider.” I checked this figure recently. It now stands at twenty-one.
      On 23rd April 2019 the European Council issued its Military Command and Control Structures document, outlining its military command structure over member states’ land, sea and air forces. The diagram contained within reappears on the Wikipedia page for the Kortenberg Building, above.
      In September 2021 Ursula Von der Leyen said this: “But what we need is the European Defence Union. In the last weeks there have been many discussions on expeditionary forces. On what type and how many we need: battlegroups or EU entry forces. This is no doubt part of the debate - and I believe it will be part of the solution. But the more fundamental issue is why this has not worked in the past. You can have the most advanced forces in the world - but if you are never prepared to use them - of what use are they?”
      Last year the EU led joint military exercises in Spain. This is taken from the EU’s CSDP website: “The two-part MILEX 23 exercise commenced on 18 September and concluded on 22 October. The first part of this intense period was a 3-week planning phase by the MPCC in Brussels. In part two, this culminated in the EU’s first ever live military exercise from 16 - 22 October in Rota Naval Base, Cadiz, Spain. During Part 2, an EU Battlegroup-sized force carried out the Operational Plan developed by the MPCC in Part 1. Overall, 19 Member States contributed to MILEX 23.”
      (CSDP = Common Security and Defence Policy. MPCC = Military Planning and Conduct Capability).
      3. Reckless EU expansionism across Eastern Europe - widely known and reported on, including Albania (hotbed of gangsterism and corruption), Serbia and Montenegro (both traditional allies of Russia), Moldova (part of it coveted by Russia), Ukraine (currently at war with Russia), Turkey (instantly the largest, most populous and poorest country in the EU upon joining) and several others, all of which will bring nothing but a begging bowl to the EU’s table. Oh, except for Ukraine, because, as above, Lisbon Treaty Article 42 commits member states to the military aid of a member under attack. So if Ukraine is still at war upon its accession the EU will be at war with Russia.
      4. Unfettered migration into Europe from North Africa and the Middle East (the free movement of people was a secret part of the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership, in effect since 2010, and signed between the EU and Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt, Jordan, Israel, the Palestine Authority, Lebanon, Syria and Turkey). “Eurocrats do not consider (migration) to be a problem, but rather as a project”: Fabrice Leggeri, former Director of the European Border and Coastguard Agency (Frontex).
      All this has been going on while you’ve been on drugs for the last fifteen years.

    • @markblance8492
      @markblance8492 Před 26 dny

      The grim reaper more like. Fartage is a kiss of death for the U.K. along with all of his right wing extremists

  • @akaski777
    @akaski777 Před měsícem +11

    Why does farage get so much media time

  • @roberta9833
    @roberta9833 Před měsícem +16

    This story is very sad for EU citizens but there is a good part, they have understood how the British mentality works. A lot of trust has been lost. Nobody talks about how EU citizens felt during Brexit. 😞

    • @antonioguerreiro1615
      @antonioguerreiro1615 Před měsícem +4

      Thank You, you are the first ever I have seen talk this way, I spent 38 years in the UK, had a very very welll paid job, and ................left and will never ever return

    • @roberta9833
      @roberta9833 Před měsícem +3

      @@antonioguerreiro1615 I understand very well. I hope you live peacefully in any case. A hug. 🤗

    • @antonioguerreiro1615
      @antonioguerreiro1615 Před měsícem +3

      @@roberta9833 Roberta thank you peace and good health to you and yours as well!!! a big hug back from Portugal

    • @bigkanuna
      @bigkanuna Před měsícem

      COMMUNISTS ARE LAZY, THE CHINESE COMMUNIST HID IN THE HILLS AND HAD THE CHINESE NATIONALS DO ALL THE FIGHTING AGAINST THE JAPANESE.

  • @user-kf5mn5vn3t
    @user-kf5mn5vn3t Před měsícem +13

    Publicity Addict now blaming everybody else if he wants to be a representative he has to stand up for what he believes but he doesn't thus 7 times standing for parliament and 7 times rejected.

  • @martinhommel9967
    @martinhommel9967 Před měsícem +30

    Brexit the gift that keeps taking and Nigel just talks rubbish

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      Don't be ridiculous! Are you seriously suggesting that Brexit is such a success story that migrants are actively fleeing the European Union to get here?

    • @mattsyson3980
      @mattsyson3980 Před měsícem +2

      worse he states one linezrs that have a good element of truth but out of context then runs with lies afterwards when you are 'hooked'.

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem

      The Chancellor has welcomed the “safe bet” world leading tech and AI companies are making in Britain, as over £2 billion of investment in the UK has been secured in a single week.
      Supporting more than 1,300 skilled jobs, Siemens Healthineers have today announced that they are investing £250 million to design and manufacture superconducting magnets for MRI scanners at a new Siemens Healthineers facility in North Oxfordshire.
      This comes as world leading AI firm CoreWeave are also investing £1 billion in the UK, as well as confirming their new European Headquarters will be based in the capital.
      These two UK data centres will be opened in 2024, with a further expansion planned in 2025, helping secure the necessary processing power for machine learning and AI, graphics and rendering, life sciences and real-time streaming.
      This £2 billion investment also follows Scale AI, the data infrastructure company for AI, selecting London as the location for its first European headquarters.
      Earlier this week, Wayve announced they had secured over $1.05 billion to develop the next generation of AI-powered self-driving vehicles in the UK. Founded in the UK in 2017, Wayve is a home-grown British success story and a testament to the UK’s global leadership in creating the economic and regulatory conditions for start-ups in the AI and self-driving vehicle industries to grow and thrive.

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem +1

      Taking investment from the EU maybe..

    • @rogerbarrett9920
      @rogerbarrett9920 Před měsícem

      @@markperrin8098 - Haha - I think you have got that the wrong way round. Do you work for the right wing press?, as you seem to post a lot of misinformation as if it were fact.

  • @Tawny6702
    @Tawny6702 Před měsícem +7

    The one thing I’ve never understood about a UK point system is the attraction of working in a country with such high taxation, high property prices, miserable weather for the most part of the year and the very same kind of hostile people who voted for Brexit who will discriminate against you no matter how highly qualified you are to be here, the majority are simply just racist no matter what!

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem +1

      High taxation: as a society we accept a higher rate of tax than in other countries in order to fund things that they don't have, like the NHS. High property prices: heavily loaded in favour of London and the South-East, whose vendors and estate agents prefer to sell to oligarchs and oil sheikhs. Miserable weather: well, they shouldn't come if they won't put up with a bit of rain, but they seem to like the NHS and the welfare state that the British taxpayer has laid out on a plate for them. Brexit: deliverance from the giant, duplicitous, megalomaniac scam that continues to work towards one big country and which is putting its armed forces together.

    • @antonioguerreiro1615
      @antonioguerreiro1615 Před měsícem +1

      @@SJG-nr8uj typical gammon talking shyte, who does not have an NHS and welfare system ???.......that must be why in my village of 7000 here in middle Portugal there are 723 british immigrants !!!

    • @iandennis7836
      @iandennis7836 Před měsícem

      ​@@SJG-nr8ujbugga me, just where to start with this gobshyte 🙄🙄🙄

    • @Tawny6702
      @Tawny6702 Před měsícem

      @@SJG-nr8uj a tax rate of 40% of anything over 50k is ridiculous, in fact you could achieve higher revenue by lowering that by 25% and encouraging growth! You seem to be one of those Brits living under the delusion of we are better than everyone on the sole basis of just being British which is part of the problem, in every sector in this country there is nothing but piss poor efficiency and arrogance, poor customer service at every turn….in other words….we don’t stand a chance! Try living in another country and you will know exactly what I mean!

    • @danganbeg7225
      @danganbeg7225 Před měsícem +2

      ​@@SJG-nr8ujYou seem to think that your English Health Service is somehow unique. It's not. Other countries have better, more effective health services.

  • @Nightsoil626
    @Nightsoil626 Před měsícem +30

    the UK could have controlled immigration when in the EU, the government chose not to, EU Directive 2004/38/EC) , other countries did using this directive

    • @Alan-gx8gf
      @Alan-gx8gf Před měsícem +2

      What like Ireland ...? LOL 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @Joey-ct8bm
      @Joey-ct8bm Před měsícem

      @@Alan-gx8gf You can pay immigrants off in the EU. It's a hell of a lot cheaper the Rwanda deal.

    • @Hattonbank
      @Hattonbank Před měsícem

      @@Alan-gx8gf Ireland, Sweden and the UK were the three countries that put no limits on immigration from the new EU countries. Didn't Jack Straw/Tony Blair say that there was no need to because there would be no more than 30,000 per annum? The other countries put controls on, hence UK/Ireland/Sweden got so many. Naievity at best.

  • @davidnelmes5357
    @davidnelmes5357 Před měsícem +19

    You are responsible Nigel. Actions have consequences. Get into parliament so we can hold you to account. Your proven ineptitude (7 prior failures) ensures you avoid that scrutiny. I expect Rishi can find you a spot. Problem - who in their right mind would elect you? Gutless.

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem +2

      The most influential politician of the last decade - BBC News at Six 28/5/2024.

    • @noelfleming3567
      @noelfleming3567 Před měsícem +3

      Where is he a politician

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem +1

      @@noelfleming3567 Mep 5 times.
      Although I accept the EU parliament is only a pretend one.

    • @MaBaKar
      @MaBaKar Před měsícem +5

      @@markperrin8098And The F didn’t even pretend to be an MEP. A complete embarrassment to the UK

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem +1

      @@MaBaKar Yet got re elected 4 times.
      I for one I'm delighted with the job he did.

  • @punditgi
    @punditgi Před měsícem +16

    Right you are, Liz! Another fine video that reveals the unvarnished truth. ❤🎉😊

    • @flabbybum9562
      @flabbybum9562 Před měsícem +1

      She's factually wrong.

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      She wouldn't know the truth if it slapped her in the face.

    • @rogerbarrett9920
      @rogerbarrett9920 Před měsícem

      @@flabbybum9562 - She's not wrong and you know it, can't you take it?.

    • @flabbybum9562
      @flabbybum9562 Před měsícem

      @@rogerbarrett9920 We won remember? It's you who can't take it.

    • @rogerbarrett9920
      @rogerbarrett9920 Před měsícem

      @@flabbybum9562 - yeh you won by the skin of your teeth because enough people believed the lies , Come on list me some Brexit benefits! I can list 20 things straight off that have been buggered by Brexit because Farage and Johnson, Rees Mogg, the ERG, The Telegraph, The Times, Daily Mail, Express and the Sun all lied. You obviously believed it - So how about listing the things the UK has gained.

  • @cobbler40
    @cobbler40 Před měsícem +6

    He certainly gets a lot of unquestioning publicity !

  • @Nicho2020
    @Nicho2020 Před měsícem +3

    The father of failed policy delivered with the mother of all hypocrisy.

  • @tonyrantnrave6854
    @tonyrantnrave6854 Před měsícem +40

    Never ever vote tory!!!!!!!!

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      Farage is not a Tory. Haven't you noticed?

    • @tonyrantnrave6854
      @tonyrantnrave6854 Před měsícem +4

      @@SJG-nr8uj Never said he was I just said " Never ever vote tory"

    • @dondoodat
      @dondoodat Před měsícem

      @@SJG-nr8uj
      So why do so many Tories want him to lead their party ?

    • @stevewilson6390
      @stevewilson6390 Před měsícem

      Never ever vote Labour.

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      @@dondoodat Because he is not in the Tory Party and they wish he was.

  • @mkoschara
    @mkoschara Před měsícem +13

    I like how you organize your thoughts and arguments regarding Brexit. Thank you.

  • @footbru
    @footbru Před měsícem +10

    I cringe every time Australia is mentioned in these debates.
    But I have to say, that a lot Australian policy makers and retired pollies, seem to have made their mark on British politics.
    John Howard, Alexander Downer, Tony Abbott are often mentioned. Of course, there is Rupert Murdochs' poisonous influence.
    But I keep thinking of Lynton Crosby, now knighted, who had a pernicious influence on Aussie politics, and then moved to Britain and plied his ugly trade there. He lives in the UK now - typical of Australian conservatives, who can't wait to leave.

    • @eucitizen78
      @eucitizen78 Před měsícem +1

      Le Royaume-Uni n'est pas l'Australie

    • @user-bt8cz9nv4x
      @user-bt8cz9nv4x Před měsícem +1

      @@eucitizen78
      I didn’t know the Aussies are now speaking French?

  • @archangel763
    @archangel763 Před měsícem +7

    Liz the points system we use in Australia is for skilled migration only.
    But the bar is set very high.
    Your former PM Johnson lowered the bar which is why you have an influx of people.
    Now this Farage is complaining about immigration when they set the terms for immigrants to come in.

    • @markbowers4241
      @markbowers4241 Před měsícem +1

      Correct. Skilled is well controlled.
      Students have increased our migration numbers esp from India and Nepal who hope it will convert to PR. Our Unis are hooked on the money.

    • @chongxina8288
      @chongxina8288 Před měsícem

      It’s not down to bad policy. This isn’t ineptitude. Immigration would have happened regardless of who and what anyone voted for. That was the plan. I don’t understand why people have so much faith in our “democracy”. We see Russias “democracy” as 100% bs but ours is 100% real and you get what you vote for. 😐 Because government is well known for being honest and truthful and giving the people what they actually voted for.
      Unfortunately the world is corrupt from top to bottom. It’s not left vs right it’s them vs us.

  • @Peter-Ac
    @Peter-Ac Před měsícem +3

    Brexit - throwing a dozen eggs into the air and promising the gullible when they landed they would be a fully made French omelette

    • @markblance8492
      @markblance8492 Před 26 dny

      But branded as an English pancake. God for it an BREXITEER would ever accept anything French…..! 😂😂😂…. Oh how deluded they were. We all pay the price now

  • @BobGolob
    @BobGolob Před měsícem +17

    EU: well, enjoy first your Brexit for 75 years and then we can start to talk.

    • @eucitizen78
      @eucitizen78 Před měsícem +3

      I think we should not give up the people of this great island. They are special, yes but in the end they share our values. C'est ce que j'espère

    • @zam1007
      @zam1007 Před měsícem +4

      ​@@eucitizen78they voted to keep you nice people out. They are not as kumbaya as you think they are.

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      The EU will be gone within the next few years, brought down by its own arrogance and megalomaniac stupidity.

    • @danganbeg7225
      @danganbeg7225 Před měsícem

      ​@@zam1007He's a brit living in France. An immigrant

  • @majordog2399
    @majordog2399 Před měsícem +1

    Thank you liz for saying the truth.

  • @Tom_murray89
    @Tom_murray89 Před měsícem +28

    Brexit is a mess

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      Leavers handed the Tories autonomous powers over our borders. The Tories have been too scared to used them, too scared of the EU, the French, the Muslim lobby and Liberal Lefties like the prats on here. We have no need to take in a single migrant from Calais. They are in a safe country already, along with the other 4 million migrants in France.

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem

      Your head is a mess.

    • @bigkanuna
      @bigkanuna Před měsícem

      What caused the Tories to become globalist left wing tarators.

    • @markblance8492
      @markblance8492 Před 26 dny

      Mess = unmitigated disaster

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před 26 dny

      @@markblance8492
      “Our dear country has been ruined for generations” - when anyone with their eyes open and brain switched on can see that (for better or worse) it’s exactly the same both before and after that epochal event known as ‘Brexit’ - is the sort of phrase you’d normally expect from cranks, weirdos, cult leaders and misty-eyed nostalgics. It’s as if they haven’t noticed how many countries have managed to maintain a perfectly viable existence outside the EU. Yet people are happy to go into print with such claims and not expect to be thought weird.
      After the loss of the American colonies, an event far more historically significant than Brexit, it became fashionable to declare the nation of Great Britain ‘ruined’.
      The ec.onomist Adam Smith spoke of such statements justifiably mockingly quoting-
      There’s a great deal of ruin in a nation.

  • @user-oe9fs2fr7h
    @user-oe9fs2fr7h Před měsícem +3

    He’s a liar and a charlatan- he doesn’t even want to stand and be accountable- he’s weak.

  • @jordoncampbell5118
    @jordoncampbell5118 Před měsícem +25

    We lost our right to return migrants after brexit. and now Nigel wondering why more migrants came over in boats.

    • @nicolaclark4234
      @nicolaclark4234 Před měsícem +2

      How many did we return when we were in EU? Very few... We wasn't aloud. David Cameron was flicked off by Merkle

    • @Curryking32000
      @Curryking32000 Před měsícem

      If you're talking about the Dublin Agreement, that never worked as we all know very well. Illegals are coming over in small boats because the eu can't control their own borders, they're sweeping across the Schengen Zone and ending up in Calais.

    • @markperrin8098
      @markperrin8098 Před měsícem +2

      March 09, 2018
      Around 50% more asylum seekers were transferred to the UK under the Dublin Regulation than were sent back from Britain to other European countries over the past two years.
      Home Office figures reveal that, while there were a total of 676 returns from the UK to other European countries under the rules in 2016 and 2017, 1,019 people were transferred to the UK. The balance has shifted since 2015, when 131 people were transferred in the UK against 510 people who were transferred out.
      The Home Office also revealed that 461 transfers in to the UK which occurred in 2017, against 314 transfers out, came despite the fact that there were over twice as many requests for transfers out (5,712) than requests by other countries to transfer people to the UK (2,137).
      It has also emerged that only one in ten of UK requests for the return of asylum seekers under the EU’s Dublin regulations in 2016 led to actual transfers to other European countries (according to a recent Parliamentary Answer).

    • @davidwebb4451
      @davidwebb4451 Před měsícem +5

      ​@@markperrin8098If on the other hand you go back further to when Labour was in power we were regularly returning over 1000 per year to other EU countries. It was only under the Conservatives that dropped until eventually we were accepting more from EU countries than we were returning.

    • @Jj-ff9vq
      @Jj-ff9vq Před měsícem

      The Dublin agreement on returns? Do us a favour!

  • @kjm1059
    @kjm1059 Před měsícem +1

    At long last he's finally been held to account just 8 years to late.

  • @clivesmith9377
    @clivesmith9377 Před měsícem +11

    No country has enough professionals to do all the jobs.
    When we were a member of the EU, the EU Doctors and Nurses
    were moving around to different EU countries filling the gaps.
    But now we are out, so we cannot fill these gaps anymore.
    It's immoral to take professionals from countries that need them.
    The EU is great this way. Not only we had enough NHS staff but shorter queues too!
    Do you remember the time when all fruit & veggies were picked every season?

    • @ianmontgomery7534
      @ianmontgomery7534 Před měsícem +3

      from what I understand a lot of British doctors have emigrated to Australia - over 2,000 I think was the figure.

    • @nudgenudgewinkwink3212
      @nudgenudgewinkwink3212 Před měsícem

      Yet they hardly went to work in the e.u when they had the chance wonder why.

  • @eucitizen78
    @eucitizen78 Před měsícem +7

    First i thought that it is fine that the UK left. They were already just interested in the commercial benefits. We don't need such members. Now i see that more and more British seem to know where they belong. They are part of the European culture and that is what we need. These days need a strong comunity that share the same values to stand against the powers who want to desreoy western values. We cant do that allone. So i hope you will find a way back home where you belong.

    • @fcassmann
      @fcassmann Před měsícem +6

      No!
      Out means out.
      We don't need toxic brexitannia.
      🇪🇺🇳🇱

    • @Purple_flower09
      @Purple_flower09 Před měsícem

      ​@@fcassmann it's you that's toxic with your hate speech

    • @dataaccount5184
      @dataaccount5184 Před měsícem

      @@fcassmannI absolutely agree with you. I do believe from the amount of upheaval we have gone through since the decision to leave in 2016, that we should not consider rejoining. We Brits need to keep out of the EU as we are toxic, not towards the Europeans but toxic towards the European Parliament and what it stands for. I’m all for being friends but l can understand that there are a lot of people out there like yourself who hate us for having the audacity to leave.

    • @fcassmann
      @fcassmann Před měsícem

      @@dataaccount5184
      I don't hate British people.
      In my time
      in the in the Royal Dutch Navy, they were my brothers in arms.
      I hate the right wing racist in your country.
      I hate the insults you thrown at us.
      We don't need you!
      Try the Pacific.
      🇪🇺🇳🇱

  • @sb8163
    @sb8163 Před měsícem +3

    Farage says here that EU freedom of movement discriminated against the rest of the world. Tory Lord Moylan wrote in 2018 that EU freedom of movement was "a current injustice" and "ethnically discriminatory". They wanted more non-EU migration and less EU migration so they framed it as 'discrimination' to get public support from the likes of channels such as 'Max Robespierre', that play into the Tory's 'Divide & Rule' immigration culture wars of deliberately polarising the electorate into pro- and anti-immigration sides by labelling people who are opposed to their policy of increasing non-EU migration as 'racist bigots', with his sanctimonious middle class followers hypocritically punching down on the working class for punching down on the immigrants

  • @chrislambe400
    @chrislambe400 Před měsícem +2

    Fartage should get lost like he promised he would if brexit was not a success.

  • @micheldelacave9648
    @micheldelacave9648 Před měsícem +4

    Stupidity has a name and he is a better liar than Trump

  • @CatholicSatan
    @CatholicSatan Před měsícem +2

    But Starmer has forcefully stated that there will be absolutely no return to any of the EU platforms or institutions. So, things will not improve, farmers will continue to go out of business, the young will not have the opportunity to work, live, or study _unfettered_ on the continent. A future Labour govt. is going to have a _massive_ job on its hands fixing the Tory destruction; the crumbling infrastructure and the huge national debt is just the start and Starmer does not see rapidly increasing trade with the EU in a _Single_ Market as helping solve the problem for some unfathomable reason. Shabby Little England is here to stay, I'm afraid.

    • @chiccabay9911
      @chiccabay9911 Před měsícem

      Yes,unfortunately.

    • @markblance8492
      @markblance8492 Před 26 dny

      So what exactly will Labour do, apart from cry about the state of the economy. I fear a Labour government will spend 12 months paralysed and crying then piece together some BS tax heavy feel good policies

  • @holz_name
    @holz_name Před měsícem +3

    Look, UK immigration was always going to increase. Neither Labour nor Tory will ever reduce migration. It's as simple as demand and supply, the UK have vast vacancies and no people to fill them. If you want your living standards not to decrease, you need migrant workers. Who is working as nurses, lorry driver, fruit pickers, construction workers, and so on? Migrants. Before Brexit you had seasonal workers, workers from Poland, Romania etc. came at autumn and picked the fruits, and left again. Construction workers came for a project and left again. Now you have permanent migrants because somebody from India paid a hefty price to come to the UK.

    • @richardallen503
      @richardallen503 Před měsícem

      We may need a few but what is happening is an invasion and will not end well , for every one of them that arrive here our country turns more into the country they left !

    • @malcolm8564
      @malcolm8564 Před 27 dny

      There are plenty of people to fill vacancies, there are literally millions of working age people living on benefits. It's a massive problem for those people as well as taxpayers.

  • @phild8192
    @phild8192 Před měsícem +1

    Narcissists can’t take responsibility for their mistakes.
    Funny .. that’s something you’d say about a lot of politicians.
    And brexit voters.

  • @RealConstructor
    @RealConstructor Před měsícem +1

    They got a ‘positive immigration’ policy after Brexit, just like Farage wanted. The numbers are very very positive, only the immigration out of EU is negative. So what’s his problem. They wanted to trade with the world instead of the EU. Immigration from Asia and Africa is the first step.

  • @brummie.bill-379.
    @brummie.bill-379. Před měsícem

    Brexit has given us the biggest loss of control for the destiny of
    me my children and my grandchildren, I would gladly change
    Farage for a thousand immigrants.

  • @leecfcgoa
    @leecfcgoa Před 16 dny

    Get this man in number 10 asap

  • @blue_jay31
    @blue_jay31 Před měsícem +4

    Thanks for the true,but people are still going to believe big mouth farage !

  • @user-gn7cm6db2d
    @user-gn7cm6db2d Před měsícem +2

    Until we stop given Farage his hate time the issue of BREXIT will never go forward.

  • @hubertbreidenbach
    @hubertbreidenbach Před měsícem +2

    Farage has such conviction that increased immigration is the fault of Policy not Brexit, that he is not standing to be an MP. Makes sense.

    • @Tas17.4
      @Tas17.4 Před měsícem +3

      Does hanging around with a rapist also make sense?

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      Increased immigration is the fault of Tory policy, not that of Nigel Farage. Farage is not in government.

    • @alexanderstefanov6474
      @alexanderstefanov6474 Před měsícem

      He's only interested in money, which is why he's off to peddle his poison in the US

  • @epincion
    @epincion Před měsícem +2

    During the referendum campaign Farage actually touted to non-white UK citizens that a benefit of Brexit would the end of FOM for EU citizens would mean that those lower skilled and mostly seasonal workers would still be needed and they could be taken per formal immigration from ‘brown skinned’ nations then currently shut out for the UK due to FOM filling the gaps.
    I’ve read articles looking at why non white UK citizens from places the Caribbean voted Leave and the number one reason is that they want their extended families to move to the UK.

  • @ukloneparent
    @ukloneparent Před měsícem +4

    Another great video

  • @noelpucarua2843
    @noelpucarua2843 Před měsícem +5

    The EU may not want Britain back in the EU.
    Scotland and a reunified Ireland would probably be welcome. The Europeans know where the problems are coming from.

  • @stephengreen5628
    @stephengreen5628 Před měsícem

    I agree Liz. I suspect the irony of the situation will be lost on some people.

  • @user-bb3bo3wn2b
    @user-bb3bo3wn2b Před měsícem +1

    Well done - love your videos

  • @user-bl6kx5ev7x
    @user-bl6kx5ev7x Před měsícem +2

    If starmer is worth his salt which I doubt there should be a revote on brexit

  • @KIIXI
    @KIIXI Před měsícem +2

    Brexit will reduce migration 😂😂

  • @jorother9250
    @jorother9250 Před 29 dny

    It’s true. Brexit has massively promoted racial, ethnic, religious and cultural diversity in the UK. It’s been one of the good things to come out of Brexit.

  • @Purple_flower09
    @Purple_flower09 Před měsícem +2

    The Tories created an enormous pile of state debt - no country can get into the EU with that. Paying most of it off with a slow growth economy can only be achieved through brutal cuts and tax rises.
    Paying off some debt would suppress growth too. Are the British people ready to really suffer to get in shape to apply?

  • @erikzurcher5528
    @erikzurcher5528 Před měsícem +1

    Never trust a Tory (or a fart)!

  • @007floppyboy
    @007floppyboy Před měsícem +1

    Interesting fact, Australia has a high level of Immigration, much more than the UK.
    My Sister who moved out there ten years ago has just retired, with 10 years working.
    She gets a bigger state pension than I will from 40 years of working.
    Sus that one out...

    • @malcolm8564
      @malcolm8564 Před 27 dny

      Vast Australia 700k, tiny UK 1.2million.

    • @007floppyboy
      @007floppyboy Před 27 dny

      @@malcolm8564 actually 1.2 million - folk that left (532,000, which leaves 685,000.
      Minus the temporay visa (circa 200,000) comes to 485k/
      2,463,244 people in Australia on a temporary visa.

  • @warmachineuk
    @warmachineuk Před měsícem +1

    Farage’s point based system is reasonable for the reasons he stated at the time. It increased immigration due to large demand in the labour markets. However, immigration strains economic systems, especially housing. The strain can be controlled with a quota system but this dissatisfies labour markets. Farage has not switched to demanding a quota system, so his complaints about high immigration are absurd.

  • @earlbee3196
    @earlbee3196 Před měsícem

    Nigel is not outspoken but he likes to speak
    And loves to be spoken to (in his world)
    Nigel is happy in his world (in his world)
    Nigel is happy in his world (in his world)
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    We only want what's best for him
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    Nigel just needs this helping hand
    And if young Nigel says he's happy
    He must be happy
    He must be happy
    He must be happy in his world
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    We only want what's best for him
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    Nigel just needs this helping hand
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    He has his future in a British steel
    Steel, steel, steel, steel, steel, yeah
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    Nigel, Nigel, Nigel, Nigel
    Nigel, Nigel, Nigel, Nigel
    Nigel, Nigel, Nigel, Nigel
    Nigel, Nigel, Nigel, Nigel
    Source

  • @user-kf5mn5vn3t
    @user-kf5mn5vn3t Před měsícem +6

    I'm a Brit living in Austria. I have nothing different today that I had the day before the Referendum. The EU is not the greatest thing since sliced bread it has (as with all large organisations) it's problems. It's dealing with 27 DIFFERENT countries. BUT the ONLY way to change something is NOT to leave BUT to work to change it from the INSIDE.

    • @edwardbernthal160
      @edwardbernthal160 Před měsícem

      That can't be true, have you an EU passport or a UK passport?

    • @antonioguerreiro1615
      @antonioguerreiro1615 Před měsícem +1

      @@SJG-nr8uj you talk utter BS but you are gone bye bye stay away we do not want your type ....read article 2 of the treaty of Rome.........(if you can read )

    • @user-kf5mn5vn3t
      @user-kf5mn5vn3t Před měsícem

      I have a British Passport. But I'm not a citizen of Austria. I pay my taxes on my pension here in Austria and get all the benefits I had before. Including medical. However as a non citizen I can't vote for (nor do I want to) the Austrian Government only the local government and mayor. Plus after Brexit I got a rather nice certificate from the Austrian Government welcoming me. .... I still go over to the island to see family and friends and return with no problem. In other words.... No Change.

    • @iandennis7836
      @iandennis7836 Před měsícem +1

      ​@@SJG-nr8ujaaaaaand.... another pile of duplicitous gobshyte from our resident xenophobic anarchist 🙄

    • @edwardbernthal160
      @edwardbernthal160 Před měsícem

      @@user-kf5mn5vn3t well you can#t be an Austrian citizan, you must have a perminant resident. I am a Britsh passport holder with a perminant resident permit and I can tell you, without a shred of doubt, that you are mistaken about no changes. Another thing I don#t understand is why you pay taxe on your national pension when they are exempt from taxes in every other EU member country..

  • @sugarfree1894
    @sugarfree1894 Před měsícem

    How anyone could have seriously thought that Farage was talking sense is difficult to imagine. As for rejoining, Starmer has said unequivocally that he's not going to even try to make that happen. But there's probably a far superior deal to be done with the EU than the one we currently have.
    One gets what one votes for. If one is then unhappy about the upshot, c'est la vie!

  • @deanrwatson
    @deanrwatson Před měsícem +1

    It's obvious the Tories would do that. They are the Party of the Trust Funds. They need maximum return from lowest input cost. It's maths.
    If you employ the "best" from around the World, you limit supply and increase demand, natural inflation. Also the "best" will demand the highest wages.
    So that service they provide, will cost more. That product they manufacture will cost more.
    Why, instead you have a system that sees quantity over quality. The figures have sky rocketed for areas of the world where the median income is far lower and hence the immigration is financially cheaper.
    Not only is it maths, it's history. Everything the Govt has put out for tender, has sold off etc, has seen huge dividends for shareholders and lower returns in service and value for money for the voters.

  • @davidlewis2055
    @davidlewis2055 Před měsícem

    Well pointed out Liz ,just to point out something though I did a poll of farmers I know 50 of them 41 voted Brexit

  • @jim-es8qk
    @jim-es8qk Před měsícem

    I think rubbish Home office ministers and austerity increased imigration. They've completely lost control of everything.

  • @bal1058
    @bal1058 Před 19 dny

    Nigel should have his British passport revoked.

  • @peterzapp2091
    @peterzapp2091 Před měsícem +1

    The irony is off the scale. I love it when despicable voters inflict damage on themselves.

    • @peterzapp2091
      @peterzapp2091 Před měsícem

      @@SJG-nr8uj Current net migration rates to France are lower than current net migration rates to UK, precisely because UK adopted an "Australian-style" point-based immigration policy.

  • @Iain1962
    @Iain1962 Před měsícem

    Spot on nigel. The points system can do whatever we want, we can also set a cap. Once we have 50,000 immigrants in a year, well you have to wait and reapply next year.
    Clearly they want all this immigration, they aren't trying to stop it, they are trying to manage the ever increasing inflows.

  • @KevinWright-rw6cy
    @KevinWright-rw6cy Před měsícem

    He's gone orange like his mate over the pond 😅😅

  • @user-rk8zl1mm5d
    @user-rk8zl1mm5d Před měsícem

    Great work keep it up 😁😁

  • @bubabubu6088
    @bubabubu6088 Před měsícem +18

    Keep em coming Liz. Nice work.

    • @lizwebstersbf
      @lizwebstersbf  Před měsícem +2

      Thank you! Will do!

    • @nswinoz3302
      @nswinoz3302 Před měsícem

      @@lizwebstersbf Sorry Liz I had to truely laugh at your comments and comparison about the high level of asians immigrants into Australia dramatically changing in recent years. The very first real Australian I met second day in the country was Chinese culture and was eight generation Australian (gold rush period) and my brother-in-laws childhood best mate were Lebanese none of which you might consider white enough to want to take as immigrants back in the old country.
      I’m happily living in a country where (correct figures last time I checked) 29% of people were not even born here (and correct figures again) 50% of the population have one parents born overseas. People don’t look at you funny when you speak another language openly in public to other family members (my father-in-law spoke 5 languages fluently) and you are Automatically treated like one of them once you make the decision to live here! The tolerance bar level for prejudice here is set very low indeed and this painted comparison that Australia has somehow gotten it wrong is unbelievable to someone who has lived in both countries. I know which one I’m happier living in, along with my whole family who also followed me out.
      The number of immigrates increased here NOT due to the point system, but due to the lower of requirements set by the government for the people, which will be raised again shortly due to Australian people wanting it raised, nothing more!
      The only thing I agree with you on from this report is that Farage is a charlatan! NSW in Oz 🇦🇺

  • @PeterDriscollAndTheCruisers

    PRISON..

  • @BIBIWCICC
    @BIBIWCICC Před měsícem

    He is so guilty of so many things. His next target is the NHS. We will all be paying very high insurance premiums for healthcare which will benefit hi rich friends no doubt.

  • @jimmeer
    @jimmeer Před měsícem

    This is nothing to do with Brexit. Johnson could have stopped immigration quite easily as Australia did but he was too busy partying.

    • @viquiben4919
      @viquiben4919 Před měsícem +1

      Really? Did you see the chart? Where you had easily assimilated white europeans with similar background and religion and centuries of shared History now you have a growing population of completely different aspect, background and with a big chip on their shoulder about have been victims of a brutal colonization. In a couple of generations they will have even your past changed. Good luck with that, relax and enjoy it.

  • @chassetterfield9559
    @chassetterfield9559 Před měsícem +2

    Why do we still give this foghorn continual air-time? He's no longer an MEP, heis not a departing MP, he has never been an MP, despite 7 failed attempts. He has no registered affiliation to any political position, except an honorary post as President of a private company that purports to act as a political party. His view is no more valid than yours, or mine, but he seems to be on the media somewhere, every single day, spewing his racist bile.

  • @chrisbuesnell3428
    @chrisbuesnell3428 Před měsícem +1

    Correct. Australian immigration through the roof

  • @potdog1000
    @potdog1000 Před měsícem +6

    bullshitting Farage on the great Brexit con

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      You have no idea what's going on, have you?

    • @potdog1000
      @potdog1000 Před měsícem +1

      @@SJG-nr8uj so please enlighten me with your wisdom

    • @SJG-nr8uj
      @SJG-nr8uj Před měsícem

      @@potdog1000 The EU is happy to provide you with the following information.
      1. THE EU’s FEDERAL INTENTIONS
      Lisbon Treaty Article 3.4: “The Union shall establish an ECONOMIC and monetary UNION whose currency is the euro.”
      EU Five Presidents’ Report, 2015: “Progress MUST HAPPEN on four fronts: first, towards a genuine ECONOMIC UNION that ensures each economy has the structural features to prosper within the Monetary Union. Second, towards a FINANCIAL UNION that guarantees the integrity of our currency across the Monetary Union and increases risk-sharing with the private sector. This means completing the Banking Union and accelerating the Capital Markets Completing Europe’s Economic and Monetary Union. Third, towards a FISCAL UNION that delivers both fiscal sustainability and fiscal stabilisation. And finally, towards a POLITICAL UNION that provides the foundation for all of the above through genuine democratic accountability, legitimacy and institutional strengthening.”
      Angela Merkel’s immediate response to the referendum result, 24th June 2016: “Today is a watershed moment for Europe, and it is a watershed moment for the EUROPEAN UNIFICATION PROCESS. There is no doubt that this is a blow to Europe, and to the EUROPEAN UNIFICATION PROCESS.”
      EU Rome Declaration, 25th March 2017: “Working towards COMPLETING the ECONOMIC and monetary UNION” (with a preferred deadline for completion of 2027).
      ECB’s ‘Fiscal Implications of the EU Recovery Package’ 2020. “The way that the EU has responded to the crisis also has implications for the future design and implementation of the EUROPEAN GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK. First, while expansionary fiscal policy is necessary to sustain the recovery, going forward it will be important for the fiscal rules to effectively support the reduction of high government debt in good economic times. Second, NGEU constitutes a new and innovative element of the EUROPEAN FISCAL FRAMEWORK. It will result in the issuance of sizeable supranational debt over the coming years, and its establishment has signalled a political readiness to design a common fiscal tool when the need arises. This innovation, while a one-off, could also imply lessons for ECONOMIC and Monetary UNION, which still lacks a PERMANENT FISCAL CAPACITY AT SUPRANATIONAL LEVEL for macroeconomic stabilisation in deep crises. The review of the ECONOMIC GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK, which was launched by the Commission in February 2020 and postponed because of the pandemic, provides a GOOD OPPORTUNITY TO INCORPORATE THESE IMPORTANT CONSIDERATIONS.” (NGEU stands for “Next Generation European Union”).
      From the EU’s own website: “Once the economic and financial crisis (of 2008/9) was overcome, the EU established a process aimed at reinforcing the architecture of EMU (ECONOMIC and monetary UNION). The process is based on the Five Presidents’ Report on Completing Europe’s Economic and Monetary Union of 2015, which focused on four main issues:
      • A genuine ECONOMIC UNION;
      • A FINANCIAL UNION;
      • A FISCAL UNION;
      • A POLITICAL UNION.
      These four unions are STRICTLY INTER-RELATED and would develop in parallel. The report was followed by a series of communications, proposals and measures, and the discussion is still ongoing.”
      In 2022 all member states reaffirmed their commitment to economic union, as part of Lisbon Treaty Article 3.
      From the EU’s website (dated 29/4/24): “Today the Council adopted three pieces of legislation that will reform the EU’s ECONOMIC AND FISCAL GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK.
      ‘The main objective of the reform is to ensure sound and sustainable public finances, while promoting sustainable and inclusive growth in all member states through reforms and investment.
      The new legislation will significantly improve the existing framework and provide effective and applicable rules for all EU countries. They will safeguard balanced and sustainable public finances, increase the focus on structural reforms and investments to spur growth and job creation throughout the EU. The time is now for a swift implementation’: Vincent Van Peteghem, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance of Belgium.”
      2. THE EU’S MILITARY INTENTIONS
      Lisbon Treaty Article 42.3: “Member states shall make civilian and MILITARY capabilities available to the Union for the implementation of the common security and defence policy, to contribute to
      the objectives DEFINED BY THE EUROPEAN COUNCIL.”
      The EU’s military headquarters is the Kortenberg Building in Brussels.
      The EU Global Strategy, 30th June 2016, issued exactly one week after the referendum, contains the right of the EU’s military “to act autonomously (of NATO) if and when necessary”.
      It will need this, because, as you should know, Lisbon Treaty Article 42 commits member states to the defence of a member under attack. So if Ukraine is still under attack when it joins the EU, it will be the EU which is at war with Russia, not NATO. The defence of Ukraine doesn’t trigger the NATO charter.
      On 19th February 2019 Federica Mogherini told an audience in Hamburg: “... all the way through the security spectrum, up to the military operations, because not so many know that the European Union has seventeen deployed missions and operations around the world. So, together, we are already a unique global security provider.” I checked this figure recently. It now stands at twenty-one.
      On 23rd April 2019 the European Council issued its Military Command and Control Structures document, outlining its military command structure over member states’ land, sea and air forces. The diagram contained within reappears on the Wikipedia page for the Kortenberg Building, above.
      In September 2021 Ursula Von der Leyen said this: “But what we need is the European Defence Union. In the last weeks there have been many discussions on expeditionary forces. On what type and how many we need: battlegroups or EU entry forces. This is no doubt part of the debate - and I believe it will be part of the solution. But the more fundamental issue is why this has not worked in the past. You can have the most advanced forces in the world - but if you are never prepared to use them - of what use are they?”
      Last year the EU led joint military exercises in Spain. This is taken from the EU’s CSDP website: “The two-part MILEX 23 exercise commenced on 18 September and concluded on 22 October. The first part of this intense period was a 3-week planning phase by the MPCC in Brussels. In part two, this culminated in the EU’s first ever live military exercise from 16 - 22 October in Rota Naval Base, Cadiz, Spain. During Part 2, an EU Battlegroup-sized force carried out the Operational Plan developed by the MPCC in Part 1. Overall, 19 Member States contributed to MILEX 23.”
      (CSDP = Common Security and Defence Policy. MPCC = Military Planning and Conduct Capability).
      3. Reckless EU expansionism across Eastern Europe - widely known and reported on, including Albania (hotbed of gangsterism and corruption), Serbia and Montenegro (both traditional allies of Russia), Moldova (part of it coveted by Russia), Ukraine (currently at war with Russia), Turkey (instantly the largest, most populous and poorest country in the EU upon joining) and several others, all of which will bring nothing but a begging bowl to the EU’s table. Oh, except for Ukraine, because, as above, Lisbon Treaty Article 42 commits member states to the military aid of a member under attack. So if Ukraine is still at war upon its accession the EU will be at war with Russia.
      4. Unfettered migration into Europe from North Africa and the Middle East (the free movement of people was a secret part of the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership, in effect since 2010, and signed between the EU and Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt, Jordan, Israel, the Palestine Authority, Lebanon, Syria and Turkey). “Eurocrats do not consider (migration) to be a problem, but rather as a project”: Fabrice Leggeri, former Director of the European Border and Coastguard Agency (Frontex).
      All this has been going on while you’ve been asleep for the last fifteen years.

  • @seankelly3774
    @seankelly3774 Před měsícem +1

    I hope too that when Labour get in we start the process to rejoin but we don’t want to give the Tories any opportunity to attack this so Labour should keep quiet for now as the last thing we need is another Tory government and / or letting any exteme Reform people in like Farage’s mates like Richard Tice. Another top video though.

    • @andreteelen6266
      @andreteelen6266 Před měsícem

      Your newspapers will attack anything or anyone even thinking of rejoining. Not going to happen this decade.

  • @someoneno-one7672
    @someoneno-one7672 Před měsícem

    There is a simple consideration.
    U.K. neighbours in EU are countries either as developed as U.K. or rapidly approaching U.K. in terms of the quality of life. And travelling and moving around the continent with no borders for citizens is quite easy.
    This means, a great number of EU citizens coming to work here would eventually move elsewhere to retire.
    People who come from far away countries with lower life standards will be likely to stay forever.
    Brexit was designed to increase immigration. Points system leaves cheeper paid jobs for Brits while welcoming impatriats (there should be inpats if there are expats) for hire paid jobs.

  • @Tommyshark5
    @Tommyshark5 Před měsícem +8

    Here Here Europe is our natural home we should be part of it and its decision making so I shall be voting Labour as I see them as the most likely political party to have the sense to take us back in.

    • @michaelmayo3127
      @michaelmayo3127 Před měsícem

      Labour and the EU? It's Starmer stated objective to make brexit work, that doesn't sound all-to EU friendly. And someone should tell Stramer, that brexit it working all-to-well without his help.

    • @eucitizen78
      @eucitizen78 Před měsícem +4

      Yes Europe is your natural home. That is true so i never understood why you left. It's a mystery to me.

    • @noelfleming3567
      @noelfleming3567 Před měsícem

      Didn't want d laundries to be upset

    • @aleph8888
      @aleph8888 Před měsícem

      Never heard of a Socialist that was a fan of the EU. It’s was the left that historically is the most eurosceptic. Freedom of movement of capital is baked into the Treaties, it doesn’t matter who you vote for.

    • @Joey-ct8bm
      @Joey-ct8bm Před měsícem

      @@michaelmayo3127 That's a trick. They will rule for a few years and the next election they will put rejoin the EU in their election program. You can use it as hail mary too.

  • @alfprenter8255
    @alfprenter8255 Před měsícem +2

    It was his Fault

  • @leedsman54
    @leedsman54 Před měsícem

    Farage wasn’t inflammatory, he was telling the truth.

  • @jamesmilne2455
    @jamesmilne2455 Před měsícem

    Brexiters wanted to be global Britain and have everyone coming here through a points based system and to have more immigrants from commonwealth countries when there are twice as many commonwealth countries as EU countries.

  • @henryjohnfacey8213
    @henryjohnfacey8213 Před měsícem +17

    A very rude man over talking because he has no argument or can't defend the facts.

  • @thorstenguenther
    @thorstenguenther Před měsícem

    I seem to remember that some Brexiters DID mention more immigration from the Commonwealth before Brexit, and now India, Nigeria and Ghana are indeed on the top of the list. Only they thought of Canada, Australia and New Zealand instead - just like the Mango Mussolini who thought that Norwegians should want to immigrate to the USA...

  • @lellyparker
    @lellyparker Před měsícem

    The Tories love the Australian style points based immigration system because it means the UK can cut education and training costs and invite skilled people that other countries paid to train in to do the skilled jobs. We don' t need to pay to train British people when we can get other countries to pay to train people who then come to the UK to work. Those cuts in education and training are then given to rich people in the form of tax cuts. You don' t need as much tax if you stop paying to train and educate British kids. And given that Brexit has kicked out so many low pay workers, it makes perfect sense to get untrained, uneducated British youngsters to fill those unskilled jobs and inviting in people from abroad who were trained at the expense of other countries to do all the higher paid clever jobs. Tories are all about the UK as a business. They don't actually care about immigration or the British people - well the poor ones at least.

  • @ronaldaberson5478
    @ronaldaberson5478 Před měsícem +2

    Farage; savage , ravage, blamage, damage!

  • @laurenceteague4099
    @laurenceteague4099 Před měsícem

    We must get back in the EU as soon as possible. Brexit has been a total disaster

    • @sambaliwingo
      @sambaliwingo Před měsícem

      No thanks. The EU is far better off without the English liars and troublemakers. Brexit is a blessing for the EU.

  • @philipprudhomme6967
    @philipprudhomme6967 Před 29 dny

    Mr Farage trying to avoid responsibility at any cost.

  • @dewaard3301
    @dewaard3301 Před měsícem

    Lol at UK working class. This should be a lesson to listen to the scientists, economists in this case, instead of the politicians.
    You weren't lied to, you were not children in the care of Nigel Farage and BoJo. You chose to listen to the people that told you what you wanted to hear, and didn't bother to think for yourself and rejected the advice from experts.

  • @ianmontgomery7534
    @ianmontgomery7534 Před měsícem

    I live in the Melbourne suburb of Dandenong and in the last census we had people born in 152 countries residing in Dandenong and 30.9% of us were born in Australia (this will include children of migrants.)

    • @edwardbernthal160
      @edwardbernthal160 Před měsícem +2

      Now you know how indigenous people around the world felt when the European colonization must have felt.

    • @ianmontgomery7534
      @ianmontgomery7534 Před měsícem +2

      @@edwardbernthal160 I embrace it as they are not conquering like the coloniser did.

    • @edwardbernthal160
      @edwardbernthal160 Před měsícem

      @@ianmontgomery7534 I 100% agree with you, sadly in the UK imigrants are refered to as invaders. I whent milking cows for 6 months in Willow Groves Vic back in the 80s, loved it. Have a great day..

  • @mfuller1093
    @mfuller1093 Před měsícem +2

    Liz I love and support what you do but please please lose the annoying and distracting multi coloured subtitles it distracts attention from the whole video.

  • @adrianthoroughgood1191

    The points system isn't the cause of high immigration. The low wages paid to nurses and carers mean that not enough British people want to do those jobs, which makes them shortage jobs, which means immigrants are let in to do them who wouldn't otherwise get in under the system.

  • @hugolage9842
    @hugolage9842 Před měsícem

    We need to push back, call them out. For a dictator to rise all it takes is a group of reasonable minded people to say nothing.

  • @rustynail1194
    @rustynail1194 Před měsícem +4

    It's hysterical. I work in the NHS, since Brexshit loads of Europeans have left my hospital. We took nurse's bursaries away too. Foreign nurses from all over the world have been employed. They brought their families too. Loads of immigration form outside Europe 😂 😂 😂 😂

  • @Jon-xw9om
    @Jon-xw9om Před měsícem +1

    Once again Nige has a wonderful tan. Hmm?

  • @bal1058
    @bal1058 Před měsícem

    I cannot see Labour government advocating return to European Union.