Brexit is actually more of the same from the establishment. If you read the report I mentioned, it speaks about the big variance explaining demographics of support being those who voted for leave being less educated lower income people who feel they've suffered from globalisisation and the distinct wealthy Euroskeptics vs middle class (middle income) more educated liberals. — fdrake
So the EU represents a loss of identity and a loss of autonomy. — frank
The EU is legitimately blamed for some problems by workers and Euroskeptics, — frank
while the advantages of being a member are obscure to most people.
I'm not sure why you say this is more of the same from the establishment? — frank
Under the proposed immigration system, freedom of movement – by which EU citizens have since 1992 been able to move freely to the UK to live, work, or study – will end. In its place will be a system which treats EU citizens the same as those from the rest of the world.
The government says employers of migrant workers who do not meet the skills or pay requirements will have to adjust, such as by investing in labour saving technologies like automation. It also points to the more than three million EU citizens already in the UK, many working in lower-skilled jobs, who will remain eligible to live and work in the UK.
Alternatively, employers might use strictly temporary, short-term visa schemes that do not have any skills or salary requirements. This includes the two-year Youth Mobility Scheme (Tier 5) visa – the ‘backpacker visa’ – which is currently open to eight countries, including Australia, New Zealand and Canada, and attracts around 20,000 people a year, but may in future be extended to EU countries. There will also be a dedicated work visa programme for seasonal agricultural workers.
“The overall story the data tell on EU migration is clear: Britain is not as attractive to EU migrants as it was a couple of years ago. That may be because of Brexit-related political uncertainty, the falling value of the pound making UK wages less attractive, or simply the fact that job opportunities have improved in other EU countries. EU net migration happened to be unusually high in the run-up to the referendum, so at least some of this decline would probably have happened anyway even without Brexit.”
Thanks! I think I understand it a little better now. — frank
We can make this a pissing competition over who's had the harder life but I don't see the point.
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