Tusk’s government cut the number of all visas issued in the first half of this year by 31 per cent compared with the same period in 2023. Rules for student visas were also tightened to prevent misuse by incomers planning to work rather than study.

by KasiaTyszkiewicz

3 comments
  1. [Donald Tusk’s stance on migration ](https://archive.ph/euB3I)

    >His government cut the number of all visas issued in the first half of this year by 31 per cent compared with the same period in 2023. Rules for student visas were also tightened to prevent misuse by incomers planning to work rather than study.

    >The Tusk administration also continued its predecessor’s policy of beefing up security along the border with Belarus to stop what Warsaw calls a[ “hybrid war”](https://archive.ph/o/euB3I/https://www.ft.com/content/66ba7ecd-f966-4233-87e8-e19e926d6788) waged by Russia when facilitating the journey of Middle Eastern migrants to cross the frontier into Poland. Tusk in October announced Poland would suspend the right to asylum for migrants coming via Belarus — a step broadly backed by western leaders.

    >“We see the EU, along with Britain, experimenting with what might work,” foreign minister Radosław Sikorski said in an interview. “[Controlling] migration is important in Britain, it’s important in Germany, it’s important in the US, so why shouldn’t it be important in Poland?” 

  2. No ale to dość chujowo – mówimy tutaj o ludziach, którzy nie przyjeżdzają po socjal jak często się krytykuje, tylko legalnej imigracji, wizach studenckich i ewentualnie osobach, które wolałyby w Polsce pracować, powiekszajac PKB.

    Praca nie jest zasobem skończonym – zatrudnianie jednych tworzy miejsca pracy gdzieś indziej, a kwestia skali pozwala na budowanie tez wysokodochodowych miejsc pracy.

    Czy celem ma byc obciecie legalnej migracji do Polski?

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