Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 23
British Farmers Recruit 3,000-Mile-Distant Central Asians as Brexit Drains Seasonal Labor
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 23

British Farmers Recruit 3,000-Mile-Distant Central Asians as Brexit Drains Seasonal Labor

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 23

Summary

  • Thousands of Central Asian workers on six-month visas are now picking and pruning British produce, filling farm jobs once dominated by Eastern Europeans before Brexit.
  • British farmers turned to Uzbekistan and neighboring countries after EU workers lost automatic rights to work in Britain, leaving acute seasonal labor shortages.
  • In Kent, workers like 44-year-old Uzbek laborer Shukrat Djuraev illustrate how the post-Brexit farm workforce has shifted farther afield rather than shrinking.
  • The reliance on migrant labor underscores a political contradiction 10 years after the Brexit vote, which was sold as a way to tighten border control.
  • That tension has intensified immigration politics for Labour as Reform U.K. gains ground, helping destabilize Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who announced his resignation Monday.

Insights

A Prime Minister resigns over populist pressure, yet farms need foreign workers. Can Britain solve its Brexit paradox?
With a new leader imminent, will the UK mend trade ties with the EU or tighten its borders further?