You are wrong. Don't ask the media, ask the people who voted to leave.Immigration was not the top of the priority in the Brexit Referendum. It was more to do with the Pro-Brexit Camp managing to get the message that The UK were contributing more to the EU than what they were getting out of it. Another cause for concern was the belief that the Economy would thrive after Brexit as there would be more trade agreements with Nations around the Globe. But the majority of the British now regret that decision, as there were many UK residents also living and working in one of the EU Nations. They had issues with their permits to stay in the EU. Scotland and Norther Ireland have been heavily impacted by the Brexit!!
My concern is not just immigration at the Border but the flow of weapons such as illegal guns being smuggled into Canada from The USA that are falling into the wrong hands. If they have to clamp down on drugs then the USA should tighten their borders to prevent such weapons coming North. Not sure why you equate Brexit with our Canadian Immigration Policy, as they are like comparing apples and bread crumbs!! The biggest issue is that we need the current NAFTA policy in place, rather than a ridiculous one that Trump wants to renegotiate!!
You are the real hypocrite who praises these Trump policies especially when he is trying to screw us with his tariffs. But do you want Canada to be the 51st State of the USA?
Why Britain really voted to leave the European Union | University of Essex
A showcase of research by Professor Paul Whiteley from the Department of Government which analyses a decade’s worth of survey data to determine why Britain voted for Brexit.
www.essex.ac.uk
Why immigration was key to Brexit vote
Brexit reflected ‘a complex and cross-cutting mix of calculations, emotions and cues’ but anxiety over immigration was the dominant factor
www.irishtimes.com
Brexit was a vote for national control over immigration – Labour must fully embrace it
The Brexit vote was about restoring national democratic control over domestic policy, with the most politically salient being control over immigration, writes Richard Johnson (Lancaster University)…
blogs.lse.ac.uk
The Refugee Crisis, Brexit, and the Reframing of Immigration in Britain
On June 23, 2016, Britain held a referendum to determine the future of its relationship
www.europenowjournal.org
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