I read that as floodgates from Eastern Europe... which IIRC is true. I can't remember where I heard it, but it was a reputable source. UK def takes in more Eastern Europeans than other European countries
"Free movement" is a red herring, no such thing with borders, even in the EU outside of the Schengen, which UK is not a part of. These are countries, not economic equations.
Multiculturalism doesn't worry me; I value it. However I'm not with it being used as a tool to undermine the economic stability of citizens for the benefit of those who profit from cheaper, less stable labor.
OK, he was wrong about the age thing. Not doubting there is a good amount of xenophobia in the leave camp either. But they haven't come up with loaded terms for the prioritization of immigrants over citizens that many globalists do. Like I said immigration should be a net plus for a country, not a burden. But I will touch on that below:
There is more to that than their net take from entitlements. For example it's not unreasonable to suggest that maybe the Britons are taking more from the system because the loss of jobs to immigrants has made them more reliant on it. So the net effect is still not positive.
I'm not at all discounting the bellyaching about "British culture" and all the xenophobic horseshyt being spewed. And of course leaving the EU will only make everyone in the UK's situation worse. I'm still flabbergasted. But both here and in the UK the approach to immigration over the last ~20 years has been wrong. Painting any type of call for immigration control as xenophobic is a brilliant trick the business class has fooled globalists into promoting.