A political commentator has said that Brits are “sick to the back teeth” of Sir Keir Starmer’s “broken” asylum system as more than 26,000 migrants have now entered the UK and are staying in lavish hotels that most could not afford to stay in.
Thousands of protesters have taken to the streets across parts of the country and Theo Usherwood told GB News that people “have a right to be concerned” as no one knows who these migrants are as they are undocumented.
Usherwood told GB News, “It is problematic. People have a right to be concerned, they have a right to make their voice heard, but they have to do so peacefully, and they have to do so within the confines of the law.
What we can’t have is a situation where we have riot police having to step in with metal objects being thrown and people’s lives being put in danger.
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He said that those who want to cause trouble at peaceful protests must “stay away,” he added, “I’d have thought the easiest way for those who are against these protests outside the migrant hotels would be to stay away.
“And if the protests pass off peacefully, then they’re perfectly legitimate and okay.”
GB News host Anne Diamond said that a viewer’s three daughters attended an anti-migrant protest over concerns of their safety with more migrants coming to Leicester.
She told Usherwood, “John said ‘last night my three daughters went down to a hotel demonstration in Leicester.
“For my three girls to take part in the first demonstration of their lives shows you the anger and feelings going through the country.
“The British people want all migration stopped into this country. We are suffering ourselves with the cost of living.
“And women are scared to even take their dogs for a walk because of what might happen to them. Girls are being approached outside schools, being asked their phone numbers, this is not right’.
Usherwood replied, “People are sick to the back teeth of what’s happening.
The Government has decided that it wants to operate within the confines of the European Convention on Human Rights, it has done away with the Rwanda plan, which is Keir Starmer’s prerogative as Prime Minister to do that.
“And the Government has its reasons for doing so, but there is no sign at the moment of the problem abating.”
He added, “We’re seeing record numbers of people crossing the English Channel and criminal gangs are continuing to profit.
I noticed that the Home Office has put out a press release saying that there’s been a national crackdown on illegal working and several hundred people have been arrested, but the problem is the system is broken, and that once those people have been arrested and been processed, they’re simply bailed back to go back to their hotels.
“And that’s the difficulty the Government is facing, the system just doesn’t work.”