



Political commentator Konstantin Kisin has warned that recent migrants are "living parallel lives" in Britain and failing to integrate, responding to a new report predicting white British people will become a minority by 2063.
Speaking on GB News, Kisin said: "Rather than becoming black British or Muslim British, they are not becoming British at all and they are living parallel lives."
The warning comes after research by Professor Matt Goodwin of Buckingham University projected that white British people will decline from 73 per cent of the population currently to 57 per cent by 2050, before becoming a minority by 2063.
The report, based on Office for National Statistics and census data, suggests that by 2100 only 33.7 per cent of the UK population will be white British.
Kisin said a recent wave of migrants are failing to integrate in British society
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Professor Goodwin's analysis predicts that within 25 years, foreign-born and second-generation immigrants will rise from below 20 per cent to 33.5 per cent of the population.
The Muslim population is projected to increase from 7 per cent currently to 11.2 per cent within 25 years, reaching 19.2 per cent by the century's end.
By 2100, the research estimates six in 10 people in the UK will either not have been born here or will have at least one immigrant parent.
Kisin attributed the integration failure to multiple factors, saying: "Part of the reason is, it's difficult to integrate people when the numbers are so high."
Kisin made the shock claims while speaking to Nigel Farage
GB NEWS
He noted that more people entered Britain under the Blair government than had arrived between the Battle of Hastings and 1950, with "even more" arriving under subsequent Conservative governments.
"We have this great mantra of multiculturalism which says 'every culture matters except the culture of this country'," Kisin stated.
He identified geographical isolation as another barrier, explaining that communities were "living in specific parts of this country and not mixing with other parts of the country."
The demographic projections emerge as Britain faces unprecedented migration levels, with 1,200 migrants crossing the Channel in a single day last week.
Defence Secretary John Healey acknowledged the UK had "lost control of its borders over the last five years," calling the scenes "pretty shocking."
The crossings brought this year's provisional total to 14,811, up 42 per cent from the same period last year.
Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp branded it "a day of shame for the Labour Government," whilst Reform UK's Richard Tice criticised French authorities for failing to prevent crossings despite Britain paying £480 million over three years for enhanced cooperation.