From the 9th June 2012 a new rule came into force where anyone marrying a person from outside the U.K. or European Union will have to be earning at least £20,000 a year or emigrate. If the foreigner has a child then the earnings have to be at least £30,000 a year.
This is an
attack once again on the low paid.
The £20,000
a year figure works out at £9.62 per hour, which is £3.43 above the minimum
wage for people aged 21 and over and £4.64 for an 18 to 20 year old.
The Tory-led coalition government wants to
change the immigration rules to prevent lower-paid Britons from bringing in
husbands or wives who they feel will be dependent on state benefits as soon as
they arrive in the UK. Where is the evidence of this?
It again shows that the Tories feel that the
people from the lower working class only live on state benefits and everything
they do is aimed at claiming more money from state funds. How did the Prime
Minister David Cameron, the Home Secretary Theresa May and the Coalition
Cabinet decide on these figures?
The rules
will particularly hit the low paid British workers such as nurses, cleaners,
lower grade civil servants, shop
workers, office assistants and restaurant staff as well as part-time teachers
and nurses who will no longer have the same right as their wealthier neighbours
to choose whom they wish to marry, settle and have children with.
It is estimated
that 46% of British workers earn
less than £20,000 a year and 20% earn £10,000 a year or less:
After years
of working and paying taxes without ever claiming benefits people will find
that they will be penalised because they have met a person, fallen in love and
wish to marry but are deemed too poor to do so by the Eton-led millionaire
coalition government.
Again the
lower paid are an easy target for the Tories to strut, preen and crow that they
are in control of lowering immigration to please the so called people of
“Middle England” and the readers of the
Daily Mail and Daily Express.
So please
remember the next time you go abroad or meet someone in this country from a
country outside the U.K. or the European Union, do not fall in love unless you
earn “lots o’ Lolly”.
McTaggart
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