I just hope we don't have another thread about amnesty...there is still one in active use!!
Well, The Independent is a quite lefty newspaper. I am thinking two things;
1. Whether the findings by the organisation "Strangers into Citizens" is argumentatively 'strong' - a survey of 1,004 people is newsworthy? I wonder what is the working class population, and how many of them, amongst other social groups, would support such a project, if the survey went nationwide. On their website, it says 31% (one third) of Brits want all illegal immigrants deported...so that is one in three - not really a general consensus, is it? Migrationwatch could well use this survey and argue that enough people (1 in 3) don't want illegals in the UK.
If you look at some of the responses;
21% would allow people to work legally, before returning home afterwards
31% want them all deported.
So over 50% want them to leave at some point, compared to 44% who would support them to stay indefinately. Although, the argument is to allow them to work legally...but did they differentiate between (falied) asylum seekers and overstayers? Two separate categories, no? There may be more support for (failed) asylum seekers than overstayers, but is that mentioned?
Why did they ask if they were concerned about unemployment in the UK, if there is no correlation whether illegal immigration has a net effect on unemployment here? (i.e. the argument that such people do not take jobs away from residents.) Was that question pointless?
2. Indy not knowing what their other hand is doing? Indy commentary;
There is no reason why it should not work. The United States held such an amnesty in 1986 and is considering another now. Spain, Italy and Germany have held similar regularisation schemes. And an opinion poll by "Strangers into Citizens" indicates that two-thirds of the British public support an amnesty for those migrants who are prepared to work and pay tax. An amnesty would be humane, efficient and economically justified. It would also be morally just. This is a proposal whose time has arrived.
Austin Ivereigh, the co-ordinator of the campaign, said: "We are not calling for a general 'amnesty' but a six-year pathway to citizenship for long-term migrants. It is certainly not issuing a 'green light for unprecedented migration'."
Ivereigh again,
He said one-off naturalisation programmes had been introduced in Spain, Germany and the US as part of a wider strategy of border enforcement. "It may not stop illegal immigration - that is a matter for border controls - but they do bring thousands out of limbo, recognise realities, clear asylum logjams, bring huge benefits to the state and shrink the underground economy on which people-trafficking and exploitative employers thrive," said Mr Ivereigh.
Sorry, Spain did not have a "one-off" naturalisation programme...if they mean an amnesty, Spain has had like 5, and each time the numbers have gone up. So one is saying it's not an amnesty, but the Indy commentator is calling it an 'amnesty'....I don't know, which is it?
Now...if many people agree that illegal immigration is actually a wrong term, because most people are 'overstayers', what can border controls do? If people come with valid visas, how would having 'secure borders' help anyone? Ok, stopping the 5000 or so from crossing the Chunnel might be one thing, but if we agree that many more overstay their tourist or student visas, then....would it not be that there is a need to work on 'texting' people to leave before they overstay!

trying to make sure they leave on time is an internal, not border, issue. Spain has a border issue, the UK's is not that aggressive yet.
I do not agree in full with the argument that 'we need more immigration because of a declining birthrate'. As you get wealthier you tend to have fewer children, but if governments supported childcare services - i.e. helping families to work and providing cheap, efficient childcare - the birthrate could increase. Why is it that the UK and Germany have this problem, but France does not? Because France's fertility levels are higher due to better government services. Immigration cannot always be the solution (maybe part of it) because in the long-run, the same problem arises. It should be about focusing attention on taxation for families, childcare services, maybe increasing the retirement age (if you live longer, you should work longer?) - I don't favour that - but immigrants who arrive would retire too, their kids will have fewer kids as they get wealthier/more educated - it's a cycle that won't be stopped. Neither is the problem as bad as it is in Japan where the only immediate solution is immigration, but there, their problem is that they have never had such an immigration programme anyway, whereas the UK has.