It's not progressives doing that, though. They might be all for it, but the people in power are centrists committed to neo-liberalism. It might be right of centre or left of centre depending on the year or country, but fundamentally it's centrists. And while the right might talk tough on it in all these places, the people who fund them and their campaigns benefit hugely from immigration. Hence why we in the UK saw such high levels of legal migration under the Tories. Oversupplying labour facilitates wage suppression, putting pressure on the housing supply allows the owner class to increase rents or watch the value of their home soar, the establishment can kick the can down the road about the demographic time bomb if they keep importing more working age people; a demographic timebomb that's worsened by the economic impact on regular folk of so much migration.Slick wrote: Wed Nov 06, 2024 10:10 pmImmigration. The states, UK, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, France etc etc, it’s immigrationUncle fester wrote: Wed Nov 06, 2024 7:26 pmSorry but what kind of actions are these?Flockwitt wrote: Wed Nov 06, 2024 7:04 pm There is another side to this though. The underlying swings to the right is pretty much universal in all western democracies. Look at ACT in NZ for example. Somehow the western democracies have to come to terms with themselves and the progressives who are taking actions that are for a small % of the population but affect everybody. There is a base resentment being created that is too easily manipulated. We need a better social dynamic than us vs them.
Immigration is a legitimate gripe and one I wish the actual left would engage with in an older school way to be honest, 'borders shouldn't exist and people have the right to go wherever they want' types do my head in with thier naivity and lack of pragmatism, but the left haven't held power in the US or the Uk or Germany or France etc.
The people on the right promising to fix all this are not the outsiders their voters believe them to be. In that respect they've pulled off a branding coup.