@Heccles94@CounsellingSam And if you don't get excited when foreign imports with no background checks are allowed into your land and given everything for free you are.... an utter cunt in my opinion.
The arrested Sudanese man was an 'asylum seeker'.
He entered Britain in February 2023, immediately claiming asylum, according to the police.
Who was the immigration minister at the time? And then when the man was granted leave to remain in our country?
Reform's Robert Jenrick.
Who was Home Secretary?
Reform's Suella Braverman.
They were responsible for our borders.
They failed, in the most horrific way, with the most horrific consequences.
A Restore Britain Government will abolish the entire asylum system.
No more asylum seekers.
Anyone who entered our country illegally will be deported, regardless of current status.
Enough.
Restore Britain will not fail you.
@AIMWoundedKnee As soon as you hear of a beheading you know the perpetrator isn't European.
Funny that.
When I was a young man (before mass immigration) events like these where confined to horror movies.
@NadiaWhittomeMP Please refrain from taking my brother's name to pretend that you care. You will hold nobody to account for the gross misconduct, negligence and utter failings that led to my Brother being brutally murdered and thrown onto a cold Nottingham street to bleed out alone.
.@Keir_Starmer, your statement says you have absolutely no tolerance for abhorrent scenes of violence like this on our streets.
With respect, tolerance is not the issue. Nobody tolerates a near beheading on a residential street in Belfast. The question your statement carefully avoids is prevention. And prevention requires honesty about a pattern your government has consistently refused to name.
A man in his thirties, a Somali national, pinned a man to the ground on a residential street and stabbed him repeatedly in the face and neck. Members of the public intervened with a hurling stick. A woman required hospital treatment for the stress of witnessing it. This happened in Northern Ireland, a place that has known more than its share of violence, and even there residents said they had never seen anything like it.
Your government has presided over record small boat crossings. It has failed to proscribe the IRGC despite repeated promises. It has blocked the grooming gang inquiry for a year before being forced to concede it. It has spent £10 billion on asylum accommodation contracts. It has actively resisted measures that would have reduced the number of unvetted individuals entering and remaining in this country.
The victims of these attacks are not statistics. They are British people, going about their lives on their own streets, who were failed before the attack happened. Failed at the border. Failed by a system that prioritises the rights of those who arrive illegally over the safety of those who were already here.
Your thoughts are with the victim. So are ours. The difference is that thoughts are not policy. Thoughts do not secure borders. Thoughts do not remove individuals with no right to be here. Thoughts do not protect the next victim, whose name we do not yet know, on a street we cannot yet identify, from an attack that has not yet happened.
How many more before the thoughts become action?