Rishi Sunak won’t have to forget about the migrant crisis: just take a look at Sweden and Italy

The average British belief in Sweden is a liberal paradise where everyone looks like a Nordic model, lives in Ikea-style houses and leads a harmonious “hygienic” lifestyle of conviviality.

However, he has just taken a dramatic turn to the right amid voters’ considerations of immigration.

Sweden’s new prime minister, Ulf Kristersson, chairs a coalition made up of 3 center-right parties and (in exchange for “broad influence” over politics) the Sweden Democrats, a far-right party that was once treated as a political pariah. Party, however, only won 20. 5% of the national vote.

For two decades, Sweden has been generous in accepting non-European refugees and housing them in giant urban spaces just outside big cities.

But, as the Times reported over the weekend, this well-intentioned move has led to a sense of segregation, poverty, emerging violence among drug gangs and, as a result, increased voter fear about handling immigration.

So now even the parties of the status quo are now talking about freezing the number of asylums to the minimum allowed by EU law, expulsions and benefits based on learning Swedish and adhering to the “common values” shared throughout the country.

“Immigration to Sweden has been sustainable,” Kristersson said, citing poor integration, unemployment and insecurity, while heralding a “paradigm shift” in immigration policy.

Meanwhile, in Italy, Giorgia Meloni is installed as the country’s prime minister, presiding over the top-right government since World War II.

Trying to resolve the country’s deplorable economic unrest will be her first job, but it’s no secret that she believes Italy’s migration policy has been too lenient and risks turning the country into what she calls “Europe’s refugee camp. “

As a sign of what can happen, he said last month, “The wise technique is, ‘You come to my space through my rules. ‘”

Now that Rishi Sunak holds the most sensible position, all of the above will be at the forefront of his brain as he embarks on the adventure he hopes will lead the British public to vote for him in the next general election.

And her re-election of Suella Braverman as interior minister is a smart start given her tenacity and that everything has to change.

Since 2018, the number of migrants crossing the channel in small boats has now exceeded 75,000, to the population of Harrogate and East Kilbride.

They are desperate women, youth and refugees fleeing persecution.

We have been, and will continue to be, a safe and welcoming haven for those who really want it.

And to do this, we will have to continue our discussions with France to establish effective processing centers that, once controlled, allow other people to enter here legally and, above all, safely, without having to board rubber boats operated by illegal traffickers. .

No, the challenge is economic migrants, mostly young men, who locate paid paintings and send the cash home while rarely investing in local netpaintings or, as many articles point out, arriving here and joining drug gangs, voluntarily or voluntarily. No. .

Our new prime minister will have to fix the economy and make complicated but mandatory decisions about government spending, but he also won’t have to underestimate (or worse, dismiss) the electorate’s lingering considerations about runaway immigration.

It ignores it at its own peril, as those in Sweden and Italy prove.

FOUR Just Stop Oil activists this weekend set foot on the studded passage of Abbey Road made famous by the Beatles.

Dressed in hi-vis jackets, they arrived at 1 p. m. and were not evacuated by police until 2:40 p. m. – One hundred minutes of inconvenience for motorists who reportedly “couldn’t get through”.

But the photo shows that with a little imagination on the part of the police, cars may have been slowly rolled around the obstacle of wide sidewalks, while pedestrians can simply use the blocked road.

Let the not-so-good quartet cook on their own glue until a) they want to go to the bathroom or b) they’re hungry.

This tactic worked in Germany when activists glued themselves to the floor of a car showroom and simply turned off the heating and left them there overnight.

After complaining about the lack of food, no containers to urinate or defecate, and the occasional exit to medical attention because his hand had swollen, the protest was a rain of firecrackers.

So the next time an organization of authorized throws soup, potatoes, or anything in a painting and sticks it to the wall, why just leave them there, tie them up as an exhibit under the guise of “performing art” and let the rest of us watch them spread quickly?

CAMINIAN Jack Dee remembers his days before fame as a waiter.

“People would come in and say, ‘Can we have the grumpy waiter for our bachelor party because last time it was funny, he was very impolite to everybody,'” he recalls.

He admits to putting extra hot water in the finger container “who he snapped my fingers for,” so he got burned.

It all resonates, because I was once the grumpiest waitress in the world.

In the 80s, I worked in a pub in south London frequented by braying yuppies and if I didn’t like their tone when ordering, I would just walk away and serve something else.

When they nevertheless demanded to know where their drink was, I replied, “Since you didn’t bother to ask nicely, I served someone with manners instead. “

Fortunately, the owner discovered my apparent ineptitude for the paintings and refused to fire me.

LIZ TRUSS shook hands with the Queen just two days before her death, broke the sad news to the country outside Downing Street, gave a reading at the funeral and photographed herself shaking hands with our new monarch, King Charles, all in a matter of weeks.

In other words, right after taking office, he parachuted into a point of global visibility that top world leaders can only dream of.

And yet, he ruined everything.

Challenge belief.

ANOTHER major headache that our new Prime Minister will have to take on, and temporarily, is the number of others dying needlessly from cancer due to the NHS’s mistakes to fight the disease.

Doctors missed a hundred instances every day in 2020 due to the lockdown, and now the average user waits 55 days for treatment, making the UK one of the worst countries in Europe to get cancer.

But it is human stories, rather than statistics, that hammer the hard truth faced by those desperately seeking treatment.

Like Lizzi England from Daventry, for example, who was 29 and pregnant with her third child in 2019 when she was diagnosed with breast cancer.

She underwent a mastectomy before giving birth, underwent chemotherapy and several rounds of radiation, and last year was told the cancer had spread and was now incurable.

But obviously, you need to stay alive as long as possible for the sake of your children.

Last week, he posted, “I continued the progress of receiving my new remedy today because I heard nothing.

“I had a CT scan on August 19 and it showed that my cancer was developing.

“I’m two months away from this point!. . . Why isn’t there a **** emergency?

Why in fact. Breast cancer alone kills another 31 people a day. That’s one every forty-five minutes.

Whether the remedy is curative or palliative, each and every patient deserves a sense of urgency.

AFTER Kim Kardashian’s grandmother, “MJ,” praised the pleasures of having sex in front of a crackling fire, the truth star tried it with her ex-lover Pete Davidson.

“We made love in front of the fireplace in your honor,” he told Mary Jo, 88.

As grandma’s advice, this fits the transmission of recipes, I guess.

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