froggy-
I think there is plenty of evidence, in certain parts of the country, that schools, hospitals, housing etc are struggling to cope with the population. In some towns there is evidence of a lot of EU migration.
Maybe, but why phrase that in terms of an 'immigration problem' when instead it validly be called a 'lack of infrastructure problem'?
We know that there is already a lack of housing, let alone affordable housing, for people in the UK. There haven't been enough houses built for decades.
Landlords are then able to charge exorbitant rents which many people can't afford, and so the state has to subsidize people in the form of housing benefits just so they have a roof over their heads - remember, most people claiming benefits of one sort or another are working full time.
And so people complain about "Can't afford the immigrants" or "Can't afford benefits payments" when the real problem is something more fundamental.
If the govt. built more houses then rents would go down. If rents went down, people would claim less in housing benefits.
If the minimum wage was raised to a living wage, more people could afford to live without state subsidies.
Do you see where I'm going with this? In all these cases the govt. is trying to divert attention and criticism towards immigrants or the poor or your neighbour because it is failing to live up to its job in managing the economy properly.