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UK ELECTIONS

Anxiety in Brexit territory on the eve of UK national elections

As Britain’s election campaign entered an intense final week on Monday, apprehension about the country’s departure from the European Union was high among Polish and other EU citizens in the pro-Brexit borough of Sandwell.

The Junction, a pub in the West Midlands borough of Sandwell, a pro-Brexit consituency bordering the industrial town of Birmingham.
The Junction, a pub in the West Midlands borough of Sandwell, a pro-Brexit consituency bordering the industrial town of Birmingham. RFI/Jan van der Made
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“I never thought about my nationality until Brexit happened, because I didn’t have to think about it,” says Elizabeth Kardynal. “I came here as part of the economic migration of 2004, after Poland joined the EU. I came to work, learn and make my life.”

Polish immigrant and fifteen year UK resident Elizabeth Kardynal, who works as equality and migration advisor at Rights and Equality Sandwell, a majority pro-Brexit community in the West Midlands, speaking here for a seminar of Polish NGO's in London
Polish immigrant and fifteen year UK resident Elizabeth Kardynal, who works as equality and migration advisor at Rights and Equality Sandwell, a majority pro-Brexit community in the West Midlands, speaking here for a seminar of Polish NGO's in London Małgorzata Skibinska

Kardynal now works as an equality and migration advisor for the Rights and Equality Sandwell, a local charity of this West Midlands borough dedicated these days to helping people cope with the increasing complexities of a looming Brexit.

Among other things, that means helping Polish and other EU citizens apply for “Settled Status” under the EU Settlement Scheme, which allows successful applicants to remain inside the UK beyond a June 2021 deadline. are, of our origin.”

The Brexit Election 2019

Highest pro-Brexit votes

Sandwell, a borough with a population of over 300,000 people bordering Birmingham, saw one of the UK’s highest pro-Brexit votes in the June 2016 referendum on EU membership, with 66.7 percent casting ballots in favour of leaving.

“We expect more cases to be brought because of discrimination, harassment and other issues that are associated with Brexit,” says Chris Flood, a second-generation Irish immigrant who chairs the charity’s board of trustees.

Second-generation Irish immigrant Chris Flood chairs the board of trustees at Rights and Equality in Sandwell, a majority pro-Brexit community in the West Midlands.
Second-generation Irish immigrant Chris Flood chairs the board of trustees at Rights and Equality in Sandwell, a majority pro-Brexit community in the West Midlands. RFI/Jan van der Made

“We have seen a rise of the far right, and a rise of the far left, both of which have to be controlled,” he continues. “There is obviously an effect on Irish people that work within the country.”

“Get engaged”

As opposed to the Irish, many Polish immigrants, who with one million people constitute the UK’s largest EU minority group, don’t mix very well with the local population.

Kardynal, who also heads the board of the Polish School in West Bromwich says that many Poles stick to themselves, don’t speak a proper English and in some cases have never even heard of Brexit. She worries that lack of interest doesn’t help the Polish being accepted by the native population.

Her advice: “get engaged. Get interested in what is going on around you. I think as a community, we are still lacking that, an interest in politics, in the life around us, and unfortunately even though we are the largest ethnic minority in this country, because we are white and because we keep ourselves to ourselves, we are still perceived as an invisible minority.”

But it may be too little, too late.

“People are becoming more radicalised,” she says, “in all aspects of their everyday lives. If it is not rebuked, if it is not addressed, if we don’t do enough to raise awareness and learn about one another, it can be quite a dangerous thing again.”

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