For fifty years, the British political establishment treated anti-immigrant sentiment like a dangerous wild beast not something to be defeated, but a political force to be appeased with legislative red meat. Now, the lion has broken out of its cage, entered politics, and is eating the establishment alive. Margaret Thatcher abolishes automatic birthright citizenship (*jus soli*), trading a centuries-old law of the land for a cold law of the blood. Successive Tory governments spent the next two decades seamlessly conflating "immigrant" with "criminal" in the public psyche. New Labour takes power but refuses to starve the beast. Instead, they introduce the *Life in the UK* test a bureaucratic hazing ritual testing applicants on trivia (like the height of the London Eye) that the Home Office minister who designed it couldn't even answer. Keir Starmer attempts to out-hawk the Right by tightening restrictions and warning against an **"island of strangers."** It backfires spectacularly, accidentally echoing Enoch Powell and alienating his base while ignoring the grand irony: the previous Prime Minister (Rishi Sunak) was the child of immigrants, and most asylum seekers come from countries Britain spent centuries colonizing. The greatest failure of modern progressive politics was refusing to make the affirmative, moral case for immigration. By constantly trying to appease the beast with slightly smaller cuts of meat, the establishment validated its hunger. Today, **Reform UK** hasn't conquered British politics; they’ve simply sat down to a feast fifty years of Westminster cowardice prepared for them. You do not defeat a lion by feeding it politely. You defeat it by refusing to feed it at all.
When will a foreign adoption be recognised in common law for immigration purposes? By Nick Nason
In W v SSHD[2017] EWHC 1733 (Fam) (07 July 2017) a married couple resident in the UK on a Tier 2 visa attempted to bring their 2-year-old adoptive son, V, to join them from Nigeria.The application they made for him to enter as a Points Based System dependent was rejected after the Secretary of State …

