Modern Folk Beliefs VII: “Immigration built Britain”
Every
society has its folk beliefs: sayings and stories about the world that
are widely held yet not grounded in fact. Traditionally, these were
things like a maxim about health or wealth from your grandmother, or an
old proverb of forgotten origin. But from the mid 20th century, ideas
originating from academia or political activism, transmitted by mass
media and mass education, came to be ever more influential in
determining mainstream culture. This has given rise to what I have come
to think of as modern folk beliefs; simplistic, muddled and often
moralistic versions of the original ideas that have become widely held
among large segments of society.
The
folk belief that is the subject of this article holds that immigration
is a central theme of British history and a core aspect of Britain’s
identity. It further holds that immigration is always a positive
story, responsible in large part for the good things about the country.
You can see it in recent statements from various politicians, such as
Zack Polanski’s “Migration is our DNA as a country” [sic], or Diane Abbott’s “Immigrants built this land”. Various journalists, public officials and activists now claim things like “immigrants built Britain”, “Wales and Britain is the great country it is because of centuries of immigration”, or “we are a country that’s been built on immigration”. In my experience, the belief has also filtered down significantly into the general population.
There’s a trivially true version of the claim, in that there has always been some immigration
to Britain, and that these immigrants have made various contributions
to national life. But it’s generally made in a far stronger way – not
just that some immigrants made contributions, but that immigration was
central and foundational. In this article I will interpret the claim in
its stronger form, as I think it’s pretty clear that that’s how its
advocates intend it.
This
article will go over the history of settlement in and immigration to
Britain, highlighting the aspects which are the focus of the mythmaking,
before going into the origins and nature of the belief.
The
mythmaking begins with the attempt to force the early settlement of
Britain into an ‘immigration’ conceptual box. Stewart Lee’s well-known
comedy sketch
from 2013 offers a good example, mocking the idea that there is
anything unusual about current immigration, which has always consisted
of nothing more than newcomers bringing useful new goods and services to
a benighted and prejudiced native population. In this conception the
‘immigrant’ beaker folk in 2000 BC brought, naturally, their beakers, while the Anglo-Saxons brought their jewellery, ship burials and epic poetry.
In
reality these groups were not immigrants joining an existing society
but settlers establishing a new one, a process which was catastrophic
for the existing population. The arrival of the beaker folk led to the replacement
of 90% of Britain’s gene pool, a process which I imagine involved
something rather more traumatic than the exchange of beakers, while the
negative impact of the settlement of the Anglo-Saxons on the Britons
hardly needs to be spelled out. Stewart Lee would probably respond to
this in the vein of “it’s just a joke mate”, yet it’s now common to hear
people genuinely equate this early settlement with modern immigration.
Once
we get into more recent centuries, which saw something like immigration
in the contemporary sense, it still remained on a far too small a scale
to have possibly ‘built Britain’. The largest and best-known example
prior to the 19th century was that of the Huguenots, around 50,000 of
whom came in the last decades of the 17th century, but making up only
around 1% of the overall population. In giving sanctuary only to those
who shared the dominant religion, it was also entirely unlike our
present asylum policy. The closest analogy to Huguenot migration today
is probably Trump’s offer of asylum to white South Africans.
Irish
immigration came in the 19th century, with there being around 800,000
Irish-born people (3.5% of the population) recorded at the peak in the
1861 census. Considering that Ireland was part of the United Kingdom at
the time, whether this truly counts as immigration is debatable, but
I’ll allow it. Here we can see how much the left has changed tune on
this issue. Both Marx and Engels1
were very clear that Irish immigration into British industrial towns
was in the interests of the capitalists, and that its impact was to
depress wages and degrade the condition of the native working class.
This was the mainstream view on the left well into the twentieth
century, but has now disappeared from British left-wing politics. In the
US, Bernie Sanders advanced this position in 2015, to the vociferous opposition
of the less traditional left. Then, in the late 19th and early 20th
century around 300,000 East-European Jews came to Britain, coming to
make up around 0.7% of the total population prior to the first world
war.
These
were the largest groups to come in this period, various others came in
small numbers, including various Europeans such as Dutch or Italians,
and a very few from Asia or Africa, mostly seamen who settled in port
cities. During these centuries, the foreign-born never made up more than
a few percentage points of the British population, which was in fact
expanding massively through natural increase, while sending millions to settle abroad.
After
the second world war, immigration started to become more significant,
and the core focus of today’s mythmaking is on the non-white immigrants
who arrived during these decades. Most prominent in the narrative is, of
course, the ‘Windrush generation’ from the Caribbean, who, Kier Starmer claimed last year, “laid the foundations for modern Britain.” We even have a National Windrush Monument
at Waterloo station, including the inscription “You Called ... and We
Came”, despite the fact that the Caribbean passengers were not called for
and that the government of the day was alarmed at their arrival. In
fact, in another example of how much the left has changed, it was Labour
MPs who wrote to Clement Attlee urging stronger immigration control.
What
the inscription is drawing upon is the subsequent, direct recruitment
of people from the Caribbean to work in organisations like London
transport and the NHS. The NHS roles are the most emphasised, in order
to try and link immigration to that other modern myth of British life.2 This role was real, but the degree to which it is representative of the wider story has been exaggerated. By 1965 3,000 to 5,000 Jamaican women were working as NHS nurses, 2% of the total
number of nursing staff. If we add other Caribbean countries it’s
likely the numbers would be bumped up a bit, but Jamaica was the
majority source. By this time there were 200,000 to 300,000
Caribbean-born people in Britain3, making the proportion working in the NHS no more than 3% of their total numbers.
Considering
that we are told that this immigration laid the foundations for modern
Britain, it’s legitimate to ask questions about the negatives too. Black
Caribbeans became overrepresented in street crime from the 1970s, and
by 1988, black people, the vast majority of Caribbean origin, made up 10% of the prison population, despite still only being 1% of the total population, an overrepresentation that continues
to this day. The standard left-wing explanation for this is, of course,
‘racism’, despite no other non-white group reaching anything like this
level. A similar story can be seen in social housing, in which Black
Caribbeans were twice as likely to live as the general population by
19914; today they remain the group that is the most dependent on it, at 48% of households. Is this best described as building Britain, or is it living in a country that was already built?
The
same dynamic can be seen more generally. Immigrants overall did make up
significant proportions of NHS staff, most prominently making up around
a quarter of NHS doctors
in the early 1970s, and a significant but smaller proportion of nurses.
There were perhaps 50-100,000 foreign-born workers in the NHS by the
late 1960s, which is a significant amount, but the 1971 census listed
3,190,300 foreign-born people in Britain, making the proportion working
in the NHS no more than 3% of the total.
And
again, we’re entitled to look at the negatives. Many immigrants in this
period came to work in Britain’s struggling manufacturing industries,
most famously, from places like Mirpur and elsewhere in Pakistan to
Bradford and other cities. Doubtless the manufacturers appreciated this
influx of cheap labour, but it did nothing to stop industrial decline,
while its consequences included the grooming gangs,
the 7/7 bombings, and most recently the rise of sectarian politics in
multiple towns and cities across Britain. Some immigrants helped to
build Britain, but others damaged and degraded Britain too.
Primary
immigration was heavily restricted by the mid 1970s, by the Immigration
Act 1971 for example, although immigration continued, often via family
based chain migration from South Asia, despite attempts to stop this
including the ‘primary purpose’ rule, introduced in 1980. Nevertheless,
as of the late 90s, political sociologist Christian Joppke could still describe
Britain as “the Western world’s foremost ‘would-be zero immigration
country’, displaying an exceptionally strong and unrelenting hand in
bringing immigration down to the ‘inescapable minimum”.5
However,
just as Joppke was publishing, things were changing. As the graph below
demonstrates, the real boom in Britain’s foreign-born population
happened after the accession of the New Labour government in 1997. And
looking only at the foreign-born understates the dramatic impact of the
change. Previous waves of European immigrants mostly assimilated into
the ‘White British’ population within a few generations. While this
process continues today for some groups, no one observing the
third-generation in places like Tower Hamlets or Oldham could possible
think that this process is happening here. While the British-born
population is now down to around 80%, the White British population
overall is now around 73%, the state school-aged proportion is around
63% and the proportion of births is not much above 50%. All these
statistics were above 90% as late as the 1990s.
This
period of accelerated immigration and demographic change was, not
uncoincidentally, the period in which the claim that immigration had
always defined Britain started to become common.6 In a Civitas report from 2007, David Conway identified the earliest example as the 1996 publication from the Commission for Racial Equality called Roots of the Future: Ethnic Diversity in the Making of Britain,
in which it was claimed that “everyone who lives in Britain today is
either an immigrant or the descendant of an immigrant.” New Labour
Minister for Asylum and Immigration Barbara Roche was an early adopter
of this narrative, claiming in 2000 and 2001 that Britain was a nation
of immigrants, and in 2004 that “immigration is firmly entwined with any
notion of what it is to be British”. Perhaps surprisingly for the time,
though not if you look at his more recent statements, Tory leader William Hague was another, describing
Britain as “a nation of immigrants” in 2000. From these little acorns,
mighty oaks have now grown, and the idea is now widespread.
On
an instrumental level, many people who make these statements are trying
to create a new national story that fits with the largely unwanted
demographic transformation their ideology has wrought. But I think that
there is a wider story here, that they want to be a nation of immigrants because they think that this template is what it is to be a modern nation.
I have written previously about the importance of national templates. In the medieval era, monarchs sought
to be the ‘Most Christian King’ among their peers; which was replaced
by the ideal of the nation state in the modern era. While, as I wrote
about in a previous article in this series,
the idea that this era saw the ‘creation’ of the idea of the nation is a
misconception, it’s definitely true that it saw the national principle
rise to become the preeminent template for what a country should be.
Places
that first established the template fit it better than those that came
later. For example, by the 19th century, somewhere like Britain or
France had a long history of national statehood and a national literary
culture to draw on. This was less true in less developed parts of Europe
where multi-ethnic empires still held sway; the Estonian national epic Kalevipoeg, for
example, was consciously created as such in the 19th century out of
existing oral folklore. In the last ‘nation states’ to be established,
such as the post-colonial states of Africa, there was almost no
connection between the reality on the ground and the official national
form of the state, with predictable consequences.
If
the most influential template for the age of nationalism was
established by France, the one for the age of diversity and immigration
came from the postwar United States. This template has two strands; one
is the idea of being a nation of immigrants, the other is the centrality
of black people in symbolising the nation’s historic sins and its
contemporary redemption. The symbolic importance of black people is a
topic which I have discussed previously.
I won’t go into it more here, but it is likely a factor in why it was
‘the Windrush generation’ who have become celebrated in particular.
Both
these conceptions make a lot more sense in the American context than
elsewhere, yet even in the American case there was a large element of
construction. As I described in The Rebirth of Anglo-America?,
the dominant US self-conception only shifted to ‘a nation of
immigrants’ from the 1960s onwards, in large part due to conscious
political effort (see the history behind JFK’s 1958 book of that name).
Previously, American identity had been defined to various degrees by
Anglo-Saxonism, political liberty, and the experience of the frontier.
Subsequently, much of this history was folded in under ‘immigration’,
best exemplified in the Statue of Liberty’s transformation in the
popular consciousness from a symbol of political freedom into one of
immigration, calling out to the huddled masses. And the nation of
immigrants narrative is not uncontested even today; the two Trump
administrations have seen efforts to revive an older conception, such as
removing
the phrase ‘nation of immigrants’ from the mission statement of the
United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, and promoting images
of the frontier and traditional Americana.
In
Britain, and in other European countries, the model makes far less
sense. Despite the numbers of immigrants and their descendants being
unprecedentedly high now, Britain developed its national identity over
centuries of minimal immigration. In the American context it was
possible, though historically awkward, to fit the early settlers into
the ‘immigrant’ mold, but it isn’t really for Britain. And even in
America, the ‘nation of immigrants’ narrative rose to dominance only
after a 40 year mass immigration pause consequent on the Immigration Act
of 1924, strong assimilatory pressures, and with immigrants who were
physically similar to the native population, and, on a global scale,
relatively culturally similar too.
An
additional problem with applying the American template is that
America’s shift to becoming a nation of immigrants came during a time of
continued strong population growth among the original Anglo-settler
population, and the national rise to world power. Immigration therefore
could be seen as part of this story of progress and growth. Britain’s
era of mass immigration by contrast has happened during a period of
national, and native population decline, which inevitably gives a
different cast to the process.
British
political leaders are desperately trying to fit the unprecedented
demographic change of today into the ‘nation of immigrants’ paradigm
established by a 1960s America in very different circumstances.
Immigration didn’t build Britain, but Britain is
being transformed by immigration today, into something that has
increasingly little connection to the nation that was built up over
centuries. This is why the idea of the Yookay has such resonance; something is being built out of
Britain, but it is something else. The folk belief’s advocates hope
that as immigration continues to transform our demographics, reality
will eventually catch up to the rhetoric. But the official template does
not fit what is actually happening.
