I wasn't sure if this would interest anyone, but at the end of the piece I noticed over 1,000 comments, so...........
EU workers coming to the UK should be given "no preference" for visas after Brexit, says a new report.
The Migration Advisory Committee also recommends that it should be easier for higher-skilled workers to migrate to the country.
It has called on the government to scrap a limit on highly-skilled workers altogether - currently 20,700 each year from non-EU countries.
The government has said it will "carefully consider" the proposals.
The MAC was asked to do the research in July 2017 by then Home Secretary Amber Rudd. It is thought the report will shape the government's post-Brexit immigration policy.
It comes as latest figures showed that net migration from the EU was at its lowest level since 2012 - with the number of EU citizens coming to look for work down by a third to 37,000 and overall net migration at 282,000.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-45556246PS If you are still interested
What British people think about Brexit nowBy Sir John Curtice
Professor of Politics at Strathclyde University
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-45520517I really must get out more.
Honda:
No-deal Brexit 'would cost tens of millions.Supply chain risks
Like other carmakers in Britian, Honda only stores about an hour's worth of components at its Swindon plant to keep costs down.
Instead it relies on about 350 truckloads of parts that are delivered from the continent each day.
Mr Howells said the loss of "frictionless trade" in this supply chain would harm its production output and competitiveness.
"If we are shipping and competing against a European manufacturer in Europe, they are not incurring those tariffs," he said.
"And in the UK it would be the componentry cost that would be the main additional burden we would have to carry for UK customers."
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-45558424