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Will There Be A Mass Influx Of Europeans Into The Uk Before The Welcome Mat Is Removed
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No best answer has yet been selected by sandyRoe. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Perhaps because they stick out as being out of touch with the majority, and then they have a mayor who seems to think the city is better than all the others and should have a place at the Brexit process table when other cities don't. If it looks down it's proboscis at everyone else it can expect some flak in return.
There has reportedly been a surge in British /EU passports in the last year.
http:// www.bal kaneu.c om/dual -citize nship-a pplicat ions-su rge-due -brexit -fears/
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Other European countries should appreciate that they might not be "the 5th biggest economy in the world" before they think about independence. Independence means paying your own bills and no safety net.
@Sandy
Among the flurry of threads was mention that migrants already here are suddenly being made to feel unwelcome and that UK is hostile to foreigners. There may be a hiatus while they think twice about coming and then a rush, to beat whatever deadline there may be.
That said, I feel that migration has a natural speed which just cannot be rushed. The person has to feel comfortable in their level understanding of English and also spent however many months of planning and preparing (and paperwork) it takes to get ready to conduct the legal migration process.
"No entry without a job to go to" is not in force yet, if I understand correctly. If that was part of Cameron's renegotiation, who knows whether that falls into abeyance, now that we're leaving?
@Sandy
Among the flurry of threads was mention that migrants already here are suddenly being made to feel unwelcome and that UK is hostile to foreigners. There may be a hiatus while they think twice about coming and then a rush, to beat whatever deadline there may be.
That said, I feel that migration has a natural speed which just cannot be rushed. The person has to feel comfortable in their level understanding of English and also spent however many months of planning and preparing (and paperwork) it takes to get ready to conduct the legal migration process.
"No entry without a job to go to" is not in force yet, if I understand correctly. If that was part of Cameron's renegotiation, who knows whether that falls into abeyance, now that we're leaving?
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