One Number You Really Need to Know

One number you really need to know

Bombshell statistics that tell you a lot about the UK

MATT GOODWIN

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Here’s a number you really need to know but won’t hear much about in Westminster:

257,000.

It’s a big number.

What is it?

It’s the number of British people, net, who left Britain last year.

The number of people who simply decided they have had enough.

Enough of the high taxes.

Enough of the broken borders.

Enough of the declining living standards.

Enough of the managed decline.

This number isn’t only more than three times larger than what the Office for National Statistics initially estimated —it’s also a new record high.

Once you take away the pandemic, it’s the largest number since records began, all the way back in 1964.

And it comes amid other reports that Britain hasn’t only waved goodbye to 257,000 of its own people in the last year but is also on track to lose a record 16,500 millionaires.

What does all this point to?

It points to a country that’s now actively alienating not only job creators, wealth creators, and entrepreneurs, but record numbers of ordinary citizens, too.

In fact, across the last four years, since 2021, some 992,000 Brits left the country, which is far higher than the previous official estimate of 343,000.

Think about that for a moment —nearly one million people just packing up and leaving the country. If that isn’t a statement about the decline of the country then I don’t know what is.

I cannot say for certain why so many are leaving but I’ll take a guess.

I think it probably has something to do with the big tax, big debt, big borrowing, big immigration consensus that now dominates Westminster.

Labour’s tax rises, the party’s complete failure to find growth, it’s open disdain for the middle-classes, farmers, entrepreneurs, and investors, and the worst cost-of-living crisis for generations —made worse by Net Zero and the highest industrial energy prices in the West.

All this has cemented Britain’s status as a high-tax, low growth, stagnant outlier in the developed world. The Labour government just doesn’t know what it is doing.



And that’s before you get to all the other things that are alienating countless numbers of people —the insane attacks on our free speech, the two-tier policies, the inability to keep criminals in prison, the collapse of our borders, the endless short-sightedness in Westminster, and the utter incompetence of the Keir Starmer regime in Number 10 that is more interested in fighting with itself than fixing the country.

Meanwhile, our border’s remain in total chaos.

What the Office for National Statistics also confirmed this week is what many of us have long suspected —net immigration into this country, almost all of it now coming from outside European nations, peaked even higher than we were initially told.

It reached an astonishing 944,000 in the year ending March 2023, under the Tories.

Nearly one million people, net, added to the country in just one year —and thanks almost wholly to Boris Johnson’s decision to liberalise the entire system.

In fact, even this number understates the sheer scale of the demographic churn and change the Tories imposed on a country that never voted for it to begin with.

Between January 2021 and December 2024, some 4.2 million immigrants (gross, not net), entered Britain, while close to 3 million, net, were added.

What we are seeing then, is more and more migrants from radically different cultures and countries now flooding into Britain from outside Europe —many of them low-skill, low-wage, and poorly educated— while a rapidly rising number of British people are now fleeing their own country.

Even after a partial fall in net migration, the system remains utterly overwhelmed, with both immigration and emigration higher than official estimates for years.

Yet despite the rhetoric, the UK continues to operate a migration model that serves nobody —not workers, not public services, not social cohesion.

We have a flat economy, wages being squeezed by years of stagnation, and public services buckling under the weight of enormous population pressures.

But still the establishment cling to policies that invite ever greater numbers while offering nothing in return except rising costs and deeper strains.

This is what managed decline looks like.

A high tax regime driving out its own citizens.

A border system that no government seems willing or able to control.

stagnant economy that punishes work and aspiration.

A country and a people who are losing confidence in their own future.

The new numbers do not simply revise previous estimates; they expose the widening gulf between official narratives and the lived reality of ordinary British people.

Britain is experiencing the largest outward movement of its own citizens in decades at exactly the same time it is facing the largest migration pressures in its modern history.

If this is not a warning signal, nothing is.

We need to urgently and radically change course at the next general election.

We need to end this failing regime in Westminster once and for all.

And we need to give all those Brits living elsewhere in the world a very good reason to come home and help rebuild the country they love.


This article (One number you really need to know) was created and published by Matt Goodwin and is republished here under “Fair Use”

See Related Article Below

This record-breaking brain drain will be the death of Britain

Migrants flocking to our shores in small boats are hardly of the same calibre as skilled locals fleeing the country

MICHAEL DEACON

Ten years ago, amid widespread disillusionment with the existing political parties, I wrote a light-hearted column proposing some new ones. Among my suggestions was a party called Ukep – short for “United Kingdom Emigration Preventionists”. It was a lot like Ukip. Except that, instead of pledging to stop so many people entering Britain, it pledged to stop people leaving.

Of course, it was only meant as a jokey little spoof. Now, however, I’m starting to think that it’s a genuinely good idea. In 2025, Britain is crying out for Ukep. We’ve long worried that immigration is out of control. But all of a sudden, emigration is out of control, too. And arguably, the latter will do us even greater harm.

Just look at this week’s alarming confession by the Office for National Statistics. It had previously estimated that, last year, 77,000 British people left the UK. On Tuesday, however, it admitted that its figures were miles out. In reality, 257,000 British people left. That’s more than three times as many as thought. And, according to reports, it represents a record-breaking exodus.

Frankly, I can’t say I’m surprised. Almost every middle-class member of my generation knows people who have emigrated, or are planning to (only last month, my next-door neighbours moved to Dubai). And, for the country they’re leaving behind, their departure is a disaster.

The people quitting Britain, after all, are the ones we can least afford to lose: the skilled, the talented, the ambitious. It’s not bone-idle benefit frauds who are jetting off to take up lucrative new roles in Australia, Singapore or Milan.

Meanwhile, are the people entering this country all of the same calibre? At the risk of “stoking division”, I fear not. Ever since the “Boriswave”, it’s been impossible – unless you’re a Labour backbencher – to ignore the fact that we’re importing more and more people who are unskilled.

Sadly, not all the gentlemen aboard the small boats are spinal surgeons and tech tycoons. So, instead of attracting “the best and brightest” from abroad, we’re losing the best and brightest from Britain.

In short, then, the picture is this: net contributors out, net drains in. Obviously this is calamitous for our economy. But, as the public finances dwindle, and the strain on public services grows, it’ll be calamitous for social cohesion, too.

The Telegraph: continue reading

 

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