'Mass immigration that no one voted for has made us poorer, our quality of life worse, and it's changing our culture, not for the better'
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Welcome to this week's Britain's favourite Sunday sermon.
Now just take a step back. Have you noticed in the last couple of years, it's got a bit busy around about - whether it's on the roads, on the trains. What about trying to rent or buy a home?
Have you found rents going up, a little bit harder to see a doctor, and if you have to go to hospital, A&E, does that feel a bit busier to you? Trying to get a dentist appointment, any of this stuff to do with infrastructure? It relates to the size of the population. Well, I'm going to let you into a little secret.
Yes, this is a big week for another bit of information from the Office of National Statistics, look out for Thursday the 23rd. The data on the net migration number into the United Kingdom, people coming to settle here in 2023.
Now, we already know the gross number is a city the size of Birmingham, about 1.35 million people. What we don't know is how many people, in theory, it's a bit of a rough estimate, have left. My hunch is the net number is going to be about the same as 2022, somewhere between 700 and 800,000 people. What is that? What does that number represent? Well, it's about two Bristols in one year, net, every year for the last two years.
Watch Richard Tice's full Sunday Sermon for 19th May 2024 above.