The Politics of Immigration before and after Brexit: Changed Attitudes, Changed Coalitions... Changed Outcomes?
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2 Feb 2024
15:30-16:45, SCR, Nuffield College
- British Politics Election Year Seminar Add to Calendar
University of Manchester
To request the link to join the seminar via zoom please email leonardo.carella@nuffield.ox.ac.uk
Abstract: The British political landscape on immigration before Brexit had a number of stable features: the public disliked migration; politicians from both parties tended to accept (if not actively support) higher migration levels than voters preferred; this mismatch generated electoral disruption when the issue rose up the agenda, in particular through mobilisation on the radical right and far right; and this initially intense public scepticism was gradually being eroded by demographic change. Brexit has fundamentally changed this landscape, triggering major shifts in both public opinion and electoral competition over immigration. In this talk, Professor Rob Ford (University of Manchester) reviews the past politics of immigration in Britain, explains how and why it was changed by Brexit, and considers the implications of the new politics of immigration for the upcoming general election.
The British Politics Election Year Seminar is convened by Jane Green, Leonardo Carella and Zack Grant. For more information on this or any of the seminars in the series, please contact politics.secretary@nuffield.ox.ac.uk.