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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Monday, January 20, 2014

Swiss cut welfare to alien "migrant" workers



A No-Brainer
  • Under pressure from the conservative Swiss People’s Party the flow of "free" taxpayer paid for crap to aliens is being cut off.


Switzerland is scrapping benefits for unemployed migrants from the European Union and planning new powers to expel them ahead of a referendum on a migration cap next month.

Residency permits for foreign pensioners who retire to Switzerland and apply for state benefits will also be reviewed. The aim is to relieve the pressure on the welfare budget.

Under new rules announced last week, Britons and other EU citizens, as well as incomers from the European Economic Area states of Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway, will no longer receive benefits if they lose their jobs and have not contributed to Switzerland’s insurance fund for the jobless reports The Sunday Times.

Foreigners will lose their residency permit after five years if they have been out of work for the previous 12 months.

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The tighter rules come ahead of the referendum on capping migration, called by the right-wing Swiss People’s party and scheduled for February 9. The party has described its proposal as an “initiative against mass immigration”.
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The government and business leaders oppose the cap (naturally), which they claim could leave Switzerland without a vital inflow of qualified migrants (translation - cheap labor). In recent years, German doctors have been flocking to Switzerland, attracted by generous salaries, high living standards and excellent working conditions.

Switzerland is not in the EU, but has an open-border agreement with the union’s 28 member states. Under present rules, EU migrants are allowed to search for work in Switzerland for 12 months. If they have worked in another country for at least a year before their arrival, they are entitled to unemployment benefits immediately.

There are 1.8 million foreigners in Switzerland, about 23% of the population.

Critics refer to the referendum as an “initiative for isolation”, and suggest the government announced the new rules in an attempt to appease voters before the poll.

Johann Schneider-Ammann, the economics minister, denied there was any such ploy, but admitted Switzerland’s housing crisis was “partially” down to an influx of foreigners.

In a 2009 referendum, also backed by the Swiss People’s party, more than 57% of voters supported a constitutional ban on the construction of minarets on mosques. It subsequently emerged that there are only four mosques with minarets in the country.


The Conservative Swiss People's Party is forcing changes in
unlimited immigration and welfare to "alien" workers.


Sucking on the Government Teat
Switzerland is cutting off that sweet, sweet flow of tax
money to non-citizen "migrant" aliens.

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