Months on from the EU referendum, our understanding of the Leave vote is still patchy in certain areas. We’ve learnt that older people and the less affluent were more likely to choose Brexit, but we know less about how the vote broke down in ethnic terms.
Polls conducted before the European referendum – and indeed some conducted afterwards – indicated that ethnic minority voters were more likely to vote Remain.
However, there is data to suggest that the strength of euroscepticism within the British South Asian population was perhaps stronger than previously anticipated.
A number of jurisdictions with large South Asian populations delivered Leave votes, including Luton (56.5% Leave), Hillingdon (56.4% Leave), Slough (54.3% Leave) and Bradford (54.2% Leave). All have South Asian populations of 25% and above. It’s not unreasonable to think that such Leave votes could not have been delivered without a significant number of Asian voters opting for Brexit.
And more recently released ward-level data from the West London boroughs of Ealing and Hounslow provides strong support for the idea that Asian voters were more inclined towards Leave than the polls suggested. In these two multi-ethnic boroughs, non-white ethnicity was associated with voting Leave, defying the wider national trend.
In both boroughs, the more prosperous, mainly white wards voted strongly in favour of Remain. The Asian areas, on the other hand, were much more evenly split between Remain and Leave (it’s also worth mentioning that the poorer, largely white areas containing council estates voted to Leave).
While the borough of Ealing voted overall Remain by 60.4%, the wards (Broadway and Green) in Southall – primarily a South Asian residential district – voted only very narrowly Remain (50.5% and 50.9% respectively).
Ealing’s relatively prosperous, predominantly white wards such as Southfield, Northfield, Walpole and Ealing Broadway all delivered Remain votes exceeding 70%.
While Southall admittedly contains large areas of economic deprivation (which is linked with voting Leave), voting dynamics within neighbouring Hounslow make for further interesting reading.
Replicating the pattern of voting in Ealing, the well-off, predominantly white wards (such as those in Chiswick in east Hounslow) voted heavily in favour of Remain, whereas more deprived, white wards in the western end of the borough in Feltham and Bedfont voted to leave by 64-66%.
What is perhaps the most surprising finding from the ward-level data is that the Osterley and Spring Grove ward voted 63.4% Leave. In fact, it returned a near-identical Leave percentage to the one delivered in Bedfont ward (exactly 64%). This is despite the fact that Osterley and Spring Grove has a sharply contrasting demographic profile to Bedfont. It is a relatively affluent, well-educated, non white-majority ward with a noticeable South Asian presence.
If there is strong evidence for euroscepticism among South Asians – including those who are well-educated and in higher-status jobs – it is the voting figures from West London, particularly Osterley and Spring Grove, Hounslow.
Reasons for Leave
These figures prompt a number of interesting questions. Why did some South Asians vote for a campaign that was, at times, seen as bigoted and xenophobic? Why did a number of middle-class South Asians (most notably those living in West London) not vote in a way which their socio-economic status would predict?
One reason might be that many voters within the British South Asian diaspora don’t feel European. When the Remain campaign sought to appeal to a sense of European identity, and warned that people were about to lose that identity, it didn’t make for a particularly convincing argument.
First-generation migrants from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh were encouraged to integrate under a social policy based on the adoption of “British values”. Being absorbed into a “European collective” was never, in reality, really part of that integration process. The pro-Commonwealth rhetoric coming from the Leave camp, on the other hand, would have pulled on the heartstrings of many South Asian voters.
The Commonwealth argument became particularly interesting when the Leave campaign talked about immigration. Prominent Leave campaigners such as Michael Gove often claimed that the EU was essentially forcing Britain to implement a “racist” immigration system. While predominantly white EU migrants were allowed to freely enter the UK, those from the Indian subcontinent were subject to visa and work restrictions. Voting Brexit was seen as an opportunity to “level out” this in-built unfairness.
As for the supposedly xenophobic and racist elements of the Leave campaign, it could simply be the case that many well-integrated, South Asian voters who strongly identify with the UK were left unoffended. The “target” was perceived to be Eastern Europeans originating from non-Commonwealth countries who were taking advantage of freedom of movement.
We still don’t have much information about how specific groups voted in the referendum but what we can gather from the ward-level data is telling. The Brexit voter is not just your dispossessed, lower-educated white Northerner. They might also be your well-to-do, educated voter of Indian origin living in one of West London’s leafier suburbs.
This post represents the views of the author and not those of the Brexit blog, nor the LSE. It first appeared at The Conversation. Image credit: Danny Robinson (Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic).
Doctoral Researcher in Political Science, Royal Holloway, specialising in ethnic minority socio-political attitudes and behaviour in the UK.
Why stop at just the South Asian votes. Black British born and naturalised British Caribbean voters also voted leave across the UK as well.
The UKIPers, Brexiters will target ethnic minorities as soon as they have slammed the door in the face of our fellow Europeans. They are racists and xenophobes. Brexit is an extreme right wing coup.
One possible reason is that they realise that the UK needs more immigrants. So by cutting down on the number from the EU they increase the number coming from their”home” countries.
During the campaign for the EU referendum I was working in a community setting amongst many people from the south Asian diaspora. The views they expressed were that if European immigrants could be curbed they would have a better chance of helping their relatives get to stay in Britain and to have better access to jobs and education.
I’d echo the last comment: The views they expressed were that if European immigrants could be curbed they would have a better chance of helping their relatives get to stay in Britain and to have better access to jobs and education.The Pakistani community had been told “vote leave: they’ll relax the rules on bringing family over from Pakistan if all the Europeans go”.
Sounds about as true an argument as the “vote leave and we’ll put more in the NHS”….
I’d echo the last comment: The Pakistani community had been told “vote leave: they’ll relax the rules on bringing family over from Pakistan if all the Europeans go”. Sounds about as true an argument as the “vote leave and we’ll put more in the NHS”….
One point which has been made to me a couple of times is that Asian entrepreneurs see a good business opportunity for their contacts at ‘home’, and vice versa, if the EU grip is lessened. In other words, some of this may be more to do with business judgements than with political issues. Does that make any sense?
I am a Commonwealth Citizen from Singapore, and I had applied to become a registered voter in the UK after I started university at Hull in Sep 2014. I was finishing my second year in university in the UK when the Brexit vote happened.
I voted Leave because I felt that the UK’s membership in the EU is putting both her own citizens as well as non-EU foreigners in the UK at an unfair disadvantage against EU citizens, whereby the difference between non-EU nationals and them is the fact that they hold an EU passport. The UK needs to recognise that her economic and international fortune has always laid further afield overseas than just the Continent, and whilst the original intentions of joining the EEC for economic cooperation during the Cold War years were legitimate, the present political and bureaucratic integration has left the UK out in the cold and unable to exert an influence commensurate with her national strength in the European theatre.
I want the UK to leave the EU so that hopefully a fairer approach towards foreigners working, living and especially studying in the UK can be adopted by the Government without the prerequisite built-in bias towards EU citizens as required by the EU Commission. As it currently stands I personally find it unfair that law-abiding non-EU citizens who pay their dues in the UK have to face a disproportionate number of hoops to jump through in order to seek a future in the UK after graduating from university, whilst EU citizens get to have a free pass by virtue of the passport they hold. Having such a selectively protectionist and exclusionary nature for the UK’s immigration, education and labour policy does not bode well for her international competitiveness, and already other countries like Australia are stepping in to fill the demands of tertiary graduates seeking to continue with a career in the country they got educated in.
Staying in the EU would very likely lead to a long-term brain drain from the UK as non-EU graduates are treated as cash cows for the years of education they seek in the UK, and are then coerced to leave for other countries and not contribute back to the UK economy due to the bureaucratic and policy bias shown towards EU graduates enforced by the EU’s requirement for visa-free FoM for EU students and workers.
Being in the EU gives the UK little choice but to be unfairly protectionist in its immigrant policy towards equally-qualified non-EU citizens seeking work and a life in the UK. I don’t see the distinction between why two equally qualified foreigners should see the one holding an EU passport be favoured over the non-EU one simply because he won’t need the company to sponsor his visa, and he won’t need a minimum annual wage to work in the UK either (as specified for non-EU Tier II working visas), and he won’t let the employer incur a foreign labour levy on his head.
But hey, at least you have a vote and you were able to vote to get rid of all the OTHER foreigners. EU citizens in the UK had no such option. They pay taxes here too, by the way.
Why don’t you ask the UK as to why they still allow Commonwealth Citizens to vote in any local or national election on British soil? You’re right, as a foreigner I shouldn’t have that right. But the reality is I had that right, I exercised it for my own best interest as a Commonwealth Citizen in the UK, and as long as we don’t get equal treatment as EU foreigners in the UK I see no reason why I should sympathise or support their cause for the UK to remain in the EU and allow them to continue enjoying their ill-deserved benefits (arguably as ill-deserved as my vote as a Commonwealth Citizen foreigner in the UK).
What exactly would you argue that the ill deserved rights of EU nationals are? Britain has the toughest immigration policy in the European Union, having the right to issue its own visas to non EU nationals, not being part of the Schengen Agreement. Until 2014, immigrants from Romania and Bulgaria had severe restrictions on working rights in the UK. Belgium for example, has a system discouraging benefit allowances for the first few years of living in it for EU citizens. Britain had the right to do that, but it didn’t, blaming the EU for immigrants on benefits. That would’ve discouraged migrants who do not contribute, who are a minority anyway. Most EU citizens could not vote in the referendum, despite living for years in the UK and paying taxes, while anyone who just came in from the Commonwealth and potentially did not pay a single penny into the system had the right to vote on the future of a country that isn’t even theirs, about an issue that has nothing to do with their home country. EU citizens can only vote in local and European elections. Yes, the EU passport helps a lot. But it is the cornerstone of the European idea, a shared European identity which we are proud of being part of. This is because we share similar values, similar cultures and have similar lifestyles in general. Someone from Sweden is much more likely to fully integrate than someone from Bangladesh. You keep forgetting that UK citizens share EU citizen rights in other parts of the EU, and it is not just the ‘evil EU migrants’ who come into the UK, but vice versa. Also, do not forget that most non EU immigrants are low skilled workers, and that non EU immigration has increased, while EU has decreased. I respect your view, but I believe you do not realise the impact that Europe has on the UK.
i am dismayed at those who bought the rhetoric ‘leave the EU and more people from further afield will be able to enter’.
Frankly the brexit campaign was built on xenophobia (to be clear I am not saying that voters all subscribed to it, but this was a prominent brexit argument). The campaigners particularly ukip obscured the difference between eu migrants, non-eu migrants, ethnic and religious minorities (i.e. Muslims). Hence the pictures of syrian/afghan refugees with the caption ‘breaking point’. Many voters wanted to leave to stop these unnamed migrants entering.
This is why brexit saw a spike in attacks against minorities.
It is said that many people from Pakistan/India/Singapore didn’t see that the sentiment was anti immigration (including non-eu, because frankly the distinction doesn’t occur in many minds)
Asians in my area didn’t like more whites coming over. They wanted more Asians coming in, in other words it wasn’t anti immigration, it was anti white immigration and pro Asian immigration, xenophobia flipped backwards: basically reverse racism.
That was exploited pretty well with hushed accusations of “unfair easy access to whites but not Asians” and “we should be closer to the common market”.
Many Indians voted leave for the following reasons;
1. Minority Marginalisation – Being a minority in 65million is better 550 plus million Europe
2. Indians vote tend to vote working class – collectivist by nature!
3. Far right problem is worse in Europe than UK.
4. Indians realised they may be poorer by Brexit, but have a tendancy to look at things long term.
5. Immigration conscious – feel that they are sick of justifying there right to exist and voting Brexit just may give them an inch of peace.
6. Concerned about the growth of islamist minded immigrants coming over from war torn countries.Indian Muslims tend have strong opinions on this, but thier views are usually pushed to one side by Pakistanis and Bangladeshis islamist sympathisers in mosques and muslim organisations. (Pakistanis and Bangladeshis are larger but poorer than thier indian counterparts, as they have larger families and are less educated than other UK minorities- other indians/chinese/ black Caribbean)
7. Worth noting Indians in IT sector have a different world view than those working in healthcare- strangley enough? NHS indian workers voted largely to leave!!
8.UK Indians are very business minded (huge generalisation I’m aware) and generally feel that opportunities to invest has crumbled- new change may bring new opportunities?
9. Indians in London were split on leave; they like many other Londoners realise that house prices are affected by immigration.
10. Indians want closer links with countries like Austrailia/ NZ/ Canada/ USA….many have ties with relatives in these countries where there is a large Indian diaspora.
On the Indian Muslim point I don’t think you should speaking on behalf of another group because you’re clearly not Indian Muslim. Furthermore India is a Hindu nationalist country and plenty of first generation Indian migrants tend to bring Hindu extremist views into the UK. For example first generation Hindu doctors in UK hospitals are extremely racist towards British Pakistani patients. They’ve been brought up with a hatred for Muslims, and Pakistanis in general which we can see beimg played out in India today where Muslims are lynched for eating beef or dating a Hindu girl. The Hindu extremist Modi regime would prefer war rather than dialogue over the Kashmir issue. Ramping up anti Pakistani Muslim sentiment to win the election. The Modi regimes rhetoric against Pakistan, and religious minorities has been relentless and appeals to a large number of Hindu extremists in India. Thankfully British born Indians tend to be less extreme in their views although there are some.
The mainland land Pakistani community in the UK just like in Australia and the USA is quite successful. The UK is slightly different in the sense that a huge number of unskilled migrants arrived from rural Mirpur division in the state of Azad Jammu & Kashmir. Britain has a long history of encouraging unskilled migration most recently from the EU.
Large scale unskilled migration from the EU was the main reason why some Asians voted Brexit. In some of these areas where Asians contributed to the leave vote you will find long running tensions with unskilled EU migrants who thought they had more right to be in the country than British Asians just because they were white. The vote was a backlash against EU migrants mainly from countries arriving in the UK with a racist attitude. It was also a vote to stop criminals from EU countries arriving in the UK which has become the norm since 2013.
I agree with that leave campaign was racist towards all minorities. However the white liberal elite were never going to address the unfair immigration rules because quite frankly it doesn’t affect them. Similarly the problems large scale unskilled EU migration are creating in the areas highlighted in this article were never going to be addressed by white liberals. South Asians had their grievances just like the white working class had theirs and Brexit was an opportunity to vent those grievances.
You do not need to be in the group to evaluate behaviour of said group, Just as you do not need to be a dolphin to evaluate how dolphins live their lives. As long as the science sounds, it holds. Science, in this context Statistics, doesn’t care of your skin colour.
You’ve made a rather stupid argument.
“The Brexit voter is not just your dispossessed, lower-educated white Northerner.”
…………..is a bit of a daft comment. Many middle class white people in London (me) who are highly educated voiced Leave and many thick people voted in accordance with what their peers demand and voted Remain. you can flip that over too.
What amazes me is that this is news? Liker the hate crime spike (that never was) there has been a lack of serious thought put into the veracity of comments made by the MSM.
I voted leave for one reason, our freedom.