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Humza Yousaf hits out at Starmer's 'dog whistle' stance on immigration

Humza Yousaf hits out at Starmer's 'dog whistle' stance on immigration

Former Scottish first minister Humza Yousaf has attacked Sir Keir Starmer for his "dog whistle" stance on immigration after the prime minister said the UK risked becoming an "island of strangers".

In a piece penned by Mr Yousaf for LBC, the former leader of the Scottish National Party (SNP) repeated claims the prime minister's recent remarks on immigration were a "modern echo" of Enoch Powell's infamous 1968 Rivers Of Blood speech.

The prime minister stirred controversy earlier this week when he argued Britain "risked becoming an island of strangers" if immigration levels were not cut.

After many MPs criticised his language, Sir Keir rejected the comparison to Powell, with his official spokesperson saying migrants have made a "massive contribution" to society but his point was that the Tories "lost control of the system".

Image: File pic: PA

In the LBC piece published on Saturday, Mr Yousaf said: "Powell's 1968 speech warned of immigration as an existential threat to 'our blood and our culture', stoking racial panic that led directly to decades of hostile migration policies.

"Starmer's invocation of 'strangers' is a modern echo - a dog-whistle to voters who blame migrants for every social ill, from stretched public services to the cost-of-living crisis.

"It betrays a failure to understand, or deliberately mask the fact that Britain's prosperity depends on migration, on openness not building walls."

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Sir Keir Starmer speaks at a news conference in Downing Street. Pic: PA 2:42
Starmer's speech divides opinion

Read more:Labour's immigration approach builds on Tory rollbacksFarage on how Reform UK would deal with migration

Sir Keir made the comments at a news conference in which measures were announced to curb net migration, including banning care homes from recruiting overseas, new English language requirements for visa holders and stricter rules on gaining British citizenship.

The package is aimed at reducing the number of people coming to the UK by up to 100,000 per year, though the government has not officially set a target.

The government is under pressure to tackle legal migration, as well as illegal immigration, amid Reform UK's surge in the polls.

Mr Yousaf concluded his article saying the UK was "on the brink of possibly handing the keys of No 10 to Nigel Farage".

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