Immigrant Housing Graffiti Banner put on house on the day of the EU Referendum Vote
An ‘Immigrant Housing’ Sign has been put up on a house on the day of the EU Referendum Vote.
The UK referendum vote—commonly known as the Brexit referendum—was held on 23 June 2016. Voters were asked whether the United Kingdom should remain a member of the European Union or leave it. The result? 51.9% voted to leave, while 48.1% voted to remain.
In the video, during a political hustings, LibDem Mayor Dorothy Thornhill said, “We have no confidence in who’s in our country”. Also, a homeless man is seen living on the streets with his belongings in a shopping trolley.

UKIP “mass uncontrolled immigration from Europe, which has fundamentally changed large parts of our nation.”
The Police were seen arriving at midday to remove the banner.
The Watford Observer reported that “London councils are moving families into south west Hertfordshire and increasing the pressure on the housing market.
More than 200 homeless families in Watford and 55 in Three Rivers have been forced to stay in bed and breakfasts, hotels and homes in Harlow, Slough and Luton this year while waiting for a property to become available in their home districts.”

Who did it, and was any inside information given out? Was it residents or a random political statement?
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Earlier policies, like the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999, aimed to disperse asylum seekers across the UK, but housing was typically arranged through local authorities or contracted housing providers