Trevor Philips has called for new debate about immigration

Equality chief says new debate on immigration is essential

Equality chief says new debate on immigration is essential

Trevor Philips, chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission has called for a new debate on immigration 40 years after Enoch Powell’s ‘rivers of blood’ speech.

Speaking at the Midland hotel in Birmingham, the same venue in which Wolverhampton South West MP Powell had predicted that mass immigration would spark dire social unrest, Mr Philips said the public must beware confusing immigration and terrorism.

Enoch Powell, a shadow frontbencher in 1968, had compared racial unrest in the US to the Roman poet Virgil’s description of “the River Tiber foaming with much blood”, in a speech which made the discussion of immigration a largely no-go area for the mainstream British political parties for fear of being accused of racism.

Mr Philips said today: “For 40 years we have, by mutual consent, sustained a particular silence on the one issue where British people most needed articulate political leadership.

“Powell so discredited any talk of planning that we have plunged along with an ad hoc approach to immigration.”

He called for a new approach to immigration to ensure that Britain benefited from the “tide of talent” around the world.

“Whatever we feel about immigrants, immigration is part of our future,” he went on.

“The real question will be whether we can, as a modern economy, seize the restless tide of talent that is currently sweeping across the globe. So far we are lagging behind our competitors.

“But while we cower in fear and fret about whether to admit clever foreigners from other nations – America, Australia and Canada are already sailing on that tide of talent.”

He continued: “I believe that the more we talk about immigration the better. Many think that this is not the time or the place for this debate. I understand their anxieties. “

“If we cannot talk about it now, then when?” he asked.

Shadow home secretary David Davis said Mr Philips’ comments will strike a “brave and timely warning” about the consequences of rising immigration.