We are calling for an immigration referendum.

A new report from the Centre for Migration Control, based on Official National Statistics data, casts further doubt on the supposed economic merits of mass immigration, which the cheerleaders of that policy so often claim, whether they be in the treasury or the liberal media.

It found that since 2020, £24 billion has been given to jobless migrants or £36 billion if foreign students are included- a substantial number of whom are doing low-quality degrees to acquire a visa solely for themselves and to invite their relatives.

Immigration policy, like any other policy within the state’s purview (whether about economics, defence, pensions and so on), should be made with the best interests of the people of this country at heart.

Such a statement should be wholly uncontroversial. Yet our immigration policy is not being made with our people’s benefit in mind but rather for the benefit of the aliens who migrate here and for the multinationals who employ them as cheap labour.

The policy has been pursued since the end of the Second World War. Subsequently, it intensified exponentially since the Blair administration at rates which were then maintained and increased by the Tories since Cameron and into the present day (despite the stalwart opposition of the British public, which was channelled into Brexit and rendered supine) has placed an increasingly heavy burden on our island nation.

Immigration has added more than 10 million foreign-born people to the UK’s population in the two decades up to 2020, which accounts for nearly 80% of this country’s population growth. In 2022, a record 1.1 million residence visas were granted to non-UK nationals, despite repeated promises from the Conservatives to reduce immigration.

The vast majority of the inflows work in jobs which are low-skilled and low-paid, an arrangement which suits big business but one which undercuts the native workers, who are cheated out of a just wage, and the British taxpayer, who has to subsidise the welfare system and the infrastructure to support the rapidly burgeoning population of aliens.

Relentless and unceasing immigration, totally unprecedented in the history of our island, is funnelling fuel onto the fire of a great many of the crises we face as a country, from the housing crisis to the record-long NHS waiting lists to the availability of school places and the congestion we see on motorways.

Yet, it is doing something more significant than all this.

At this current immigration rate, the English are projected to become a minority in England, with Scotland and Wales possibly not far behind. We English are already a minority within our capital of London and many other towns and cities up and down our country. In twenty years, we have endured more immigration than in the last two thousand years preceding it.

Never in the history of our country has there been a monumental and far-reaching policy with so little public approval. The Homeland Party is demanding a binding referendum on immigration, so our people can finally have their say. The people of England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland have the democratic right to self-determination. Becoming a minority within our respective homelands threatens our inalienable rights to self-governance and freedom.

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