Daily Stormer
September 1, 2014
All the while Britain stays in the EU, Cameron cannot do anything to stop the invasion, which comes from inside Europe as well as from outside it.
This seems to be a bit of a conflicting report, as it claims that two thirds of the migration comes from within the EU, yet the actual figures show that more people invaded from outside the EU than from within it.
Either way it all needs to be stopped if Britain is to survive as a British country.
The number of foreigners moving to Britain has soared dramatically, it was revealed yesterday, leaving the Government’s flagship pledge to slash immigration in tatters.
David Cameron’s long-standing promise to get tough by reducing net migration to ‘tens of thousands’ a year suffered a humiliating blow with news that it rose by 40 per cent.
The Office for National Statistics said 243,000 more people moved to the UK last year than departed – an increase of 68,000 newcomers on the previous year.
European Union citizens accounted for 44,000 – or two-thirds – of the increase, including a rise in arrivals from Romania and Bulgaria.
For the first time since the annual population survey began in 2004, there were more EU citizens living in the UK – 2.5million – than held non-EU nationality (2.3million).
The statistics were published as No10 was rocked by Tory MP Douglas Carswell defecting to Ukip, which has demanded tougher controls on Britain’s borders.
The figures offer clear evidence of how a new wave of EU immigration has taken advantage of Britain’s fast-recovering economy – which has produced an extra two million private sector jobs since 2010 – while the Eurozone remains mired in chaos.
Experts told Mr Cameron that imposing limits was, in a reference to folklore, akin to ‘King Canute trying to hold back the waves’.
According to the quarterly statistics, a total of 560,000 immigrants arrived in the UK in the 12 months to March, while an estimated 317,000 people left.
The overall number of arrivals from the EU was 214,000 and, for the first time in three years, the number of people migrating to the UK from outside the EU increased by 19,000 to 265,000. More than 80,000 Britons returned to the UK.
There was an increase in people arriving for work to 228,000 – up from 190,000 – while 177,000 people came here as students. Ministers have no powers to stop the free movement of European workers.
Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg, the Deputy Prime Minister, said the Tories had ‘gone quiet’ on the target and regarded it as a ‘mistake’, while Labour said the Government’s migration target was in ‘tatters’.