The Who's Roger Daltrey Slams Britain's Former Open Borders Policy
Roger Daltrey, the lead singer of the Who, has blasted the former Labour-led government of the United Kingdom for allowing in large numbers of foreign workers. Daltrey, who has also criticized the current government for failing to tackle high immigration numbers said immigration has "undercut" workers.
Last month, British Prime Minister David Cameron said that immigration, welfare, and education were all connected ast the country, like the U.S., begins to re-examine its immigration policy.
I will never, ever forgive the Labour party for allowing this mass immigration with no demands put on what people should be paid when they come to this country. I will never forgive them for destroying the jobs of my mates, because they allowed their jobs to be undercut with stupid thinking on Europe, letting them all in, so they can live 10 to a room, working for Polish wages.
I've got nothing against the Poles at all, but that was a political mistake and it made me very angry. And the people who get it in the neck are the immigrants, and it's not their fault.
This is not the first time Daltrey has criticized the previous government for their immigration policies. In 2011, he said the last government left the "the British working man screwed like he’d never been screwed before."