Population & Environment Symposium
Oxford · Research Brief
Migration · Politics

Migration and the politics of populist realignment

A British by-election staged as people versus establishment is a useful lens on why migration has become the organising axis of party competition.

Abstract editorial illustration for a brief on migration and populist realignment
Fig. 1An editorial illustration for this brief. The analysis draws on published commentary and survey evidence, not on original measurement.

Abstract

The resignation of a party leader from a UK parliamentary seat, followed by an announced return through the resulting by-election, has been framed by the leader as a contest between the people and the establishment. Setting the individual case aside, this brief reads the episode as an instance of a broader pattern in which migration has become the central axis of populist party competition across several democracies. It reviews why salience, issue ownership and framing, rather than migration levels alone, drive that pattern, and what the distinction implies for policy debate.

In early July 2026 the leader of Reform UK resigned as the member of parliament for Clacton, following press reporting about undeclared benefits and an existing standards inquiry, and announced that he would contest the by-election his own resignation triggers. The move was presented not as an answer to questions about conduct but as a referendum on them: a vote, in the leader's framing, of the people against an establishment said to be using the rules as a political instrument. The specifics belong to reporters and regulators. The structure of the move belongs to a wider study of how migration politics now works.

People versus establishment

The framing does a recognisable piece of work. It converts a dispute about individual conduct into a struggle between an insurgent movement and a corrupt elite, and in doing so activates the core populist distinction between an authentic people and those portrayed as denying them a voice. Scholarship on populism describes this as a thin ideology that overlays other commitments; in the European radical right, the commitment it most often overlays is a restrictive position on immigration. The by-election is a stage, and migration is the script that gives the staging its charge.

Key finding

The salience of migration in party competition has become largely detached from the measured level of migration. Attention, ownership and framing, not the underlying numbers, do most of the political work.

Salience without a level

The instructive feature of the current moment is that migration dominates political attention even as recorded net migration has fallen. UK net migration in 2026 sits at its lowest in roughly a decade, yet public concern and party competition on the issue remain intense. This decoupling of salience from level is the analytical heart of the story. It suggests that what moves opinion is not a running tally of arrivals but the availability of the issue as a frame through which other grievances, about wages, housing, services and trust, can be expressed.

  • Salience tracks media attention and elite emphasis more closely than it tracks flows.
  • Insurgent parties hold clear issue ownership, being the most trusted actors on immigration in recent UK surveys.
  • Falling numbers do not lower the temperature when the frame, not the figure, is doing the work.

Issue ownership and the platform

Issue ownership, the durable association between a party and a policy area in voters' minds, helps explain why established parties struggle to compete on migration by moving toward the insurgent position. Doing so tends to raise the salience of an issue the insurgent already owns. The platform that ownership rests on is expansive: withdrawal from the European Convention on Human Rights, an emergency brake on work and family visas, offshore processing of asylum claims and the removal of settled-status routes. Whether such measures are workable is a separate question from why they command trust, and the two are often conflated in coverage.

Measured net migration Political salience 201620212026
Fig. 2Schematic contrast between the trend in measured net migration and the trend in political salience. The lines are illustrative of the decoupling described in the text, not plotted data.

Implications for policy debate

Reading the episode this way carries two implications for anyone analysing migration policy. First, evidence about levels, drivers and effects is necessary but not sufficient to shift a debate driven by salience and framing; a falling figure will not, on its own, cool an argument that has moved onto other ground. Second, the framing of institutions as adversaries, whether courts, regulators or international conventions, is itself a migration-adjacent strategy, because those institutions are the same ones that constrain restrictive policy. Analysts who treat conduct disputes and migration positioning as unrelated may miss how the first is being used to advance the second.

When the frame does the work, the numbers can move in the opposite direction without moving the politics.

These observations are bounded by one national case at one moment, and they describe a pattern rather than predict an outcome. The value of the episode is diagnostic. It shows, in a single compressed event, how migration functions less as a discrete policy question than as the axis around which a wider realignment is being organised. For related reading, see our brief on mobility governance at mega-events and on collective responses to climate displacement. Background on the symposium and its method is available on the about page, and the full catalogue of briefs is on the home page.

Cited sources

  1. The Conversation. “Why Nigel Farage is resigning as an MP, only to stand again: expert analysis.” 2026. theconversation.com
  2. Al Jazeera. “Reform UK's Farage resigns as MP amid funding scandal, forcing by-election.” 7 July 2026. aljazeera.com
  3. Ipsos. “Reform UK and Farage most trusted on immigration as confidence in Labour and Conservatives falls.” 2026. ipsos.com
  4. The Bureau of Investigative Journalism. “UK net migration is at its lowest in ten years, so why is the country fixated on it?” 22 May 2026. thebureauinvestigates.com

Figures in this brief are illustrative and schematic; they are not original measurements. Source links are provided for verification and were last reviewed on the publication date.