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How many houses?

Letter to Daily Telegraph published on 9th December 2015

Lord Lexden (Dec 8th) calls on the Government “to build on a scale that the nation needs” with the implication that the current building rate of around 115,000 is insufficient for our needs. But which nation is Lord Lexden referring to?

The nation of resident British citizens has a natural increase of around 200,000 per year which corresponds to about 85,000 new houses per year. Allowing for replacement housing, 115,000 is clearly sufficient for British needs.

The much larger figures of 200-250,000 houses, continually referred to by planners and builders, are based on the National Statistical Office assumption that net immigration will continue indefinitely at more than a million every five years. (It was 336,000 in the year to the end of September.) Yet if Britain votes to leave the EU, which continued immigration on this scale makes all the more likely, this number will come whistling down. In any case, it is surely morally wrong to break into the precious English landscape with houses, roads, and pylons to accommodate literally millions of people from other countries which are much less densely populated than ours.

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New Constitution for the whole UK

Letter to the Daily Telegraph, published on 9th September 2014.

Lord Lexden (September 8th) is surely right to call for a new modern federal constitution for the whole United Kingdom in which Scotland would play a leading part in negotiating as an outcome of its rejecting separation on September 18th. This is the type of positive future that the “No” campaign should have been advocating with the tacit support of the Westminster parties since day one of the campaign.

Instead of applying himself in this way, Cameron has left our fellow citizens in Scotland to fight a rear-guard battle against the pied piper of West Lothian leading Scotland into Nowhere Land: not in the UK, not in NATO, not in the EU, not in the Commonwealth, not in a Sterling currency Union, with a credit rating about equal to Argentina’s.

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