Consterdine, Erica (2022) Walking the Tightrope : Private and Public Interests in Conservative Immigration Policy. The Political Quarterly, 93 (2). pp. 288-296. ISSN 0032-3179
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Abstract
The Conservatives have long been ideologically split on immigration between the business right and identity right of the Party. Appealing to the social right of its voter base, since 2010 immigration policy has been doggedly restrictive. Yet lobbying channelled through bureaucratic politics has led to subtle, but important, concessions to appease business interests. The Conservative administrations have legitimised these concessions by making distinctions between “good” and “bad” migrants. In the 2010s lobbying strategies, while shifting according to the political climate, predominantly consisted of insider lobbying. Yet with significant labour market shortages induced by the new immigration system and heightened by the pandemic, employers are ‘going public’ with their opposition, placing significant pressure on the Conservatives to perform a policy reversal. Meanwhile public opinion on immigration has softened and the saliency dwindled. Politicising immigration may not be an electoral winner anymore; business interests may override the identity wing of the Party.