In other words, the key words can tell us about differences in what the two leaders are talking about
when they talk about immigration.
Not exact matches
Well, I think
when it comes to
immigration, we've
talked about border security.
«Stop changing the subject
when people
talk about immigration.
[Cameron] thinks that people who
talk about Europe or «bang on»
about Europe as he once put it himself, he thinks that people who
talk about immigration and who are worried
about the numbers of people coming to Britain, he thinks that people who are concerned
about the blot of wind farms all over our landscapes and seascapes, he thinks that people who discuss those things are beyond the pale and I think
when he insults us actually what he's doing, he's insulting a very large number of his own voters.
At a meeting of the parliamentary party at the end of last week, voices who last had their chance
when Hazel Blears made her doomed bid for the deputy leadership reportedly piped up,
talking about benefit claimants getting «something for nothing» and the need to sound strong notes on
immigration controls.
Is it just a coincidence that
when the Tory Party start
talking about tax,
immigration, Europe, law and order they put the government on the back foot, to point of bottling out of an early general election?
We tend to
talk about numbers
when we speak of
immigration, but I want to show the people behind the numbers.
In any event, we're
talking about the pre-Brexit situation in the UK —
when Parliament finally decide on the post-Brexit
immigration law it will no doubt be worse, as the UK won't be bound by EU law at all.
It is therefore very important to distinguish who we are
talking about when we kick the
immigration football around.