Westminster, London. The Swiss have spoken. And No 10 is breathing a sigh of relief. In a referendum that sent shockwaves through Whitehall, Swiss voters decisively rejected a proposed cap on immigration. The result: 63% against, 37% for.
For the government, this is more than just a headline from Bern. It is a vindication. A quiet high-five in the corridors of power. The Swiss model – a points-based system, bilateral agreements, no hard cap – looks strikingly similar to our own post-Brexit arrangements.
Let’s be clear: the Swiss debate was not identical to ours. But the parallels are hard to ignore. The ‘Stop Mass Immigration’ initiative, backed by the populist Swiss People’s Party, promised a strict numerical limit. It failed. Why? Because Swiss voters, like a growing number of British voters, seem to understand the compromise. Sovereignty is not about closing the door. It is about controlling the lock.
Inside the Lobby, the chatter is electric. Labour MPs are unusually quiet. The Shadow Home Office team had privately hoped for a Swiss ‘yes’ to hammer the Tories on Rwanda and small boats. No such luck. A senior Labour source muttered: ‘It complicates our narrative. We wanted to say the government’s plan is a fantasy. Now the Swiss – the epitome of pragmatic neutrality – have backed a similar approach.’
But let’s not get carried away. The Swiss result is not a direct endorsement of Suella Braverman’s agenda. The UK still has a net migration figure of over 600,000. The Swiss cap was far more restrictive. Yet the principle holds: the public can be trusted to reject populist simplicity when offered a credible alternative.
What does this mean for the Tory civil war? The Brexit ultras – the ERG, the Common Sense Group – will be furious. They wanted a Swiss ‘yes’ to push for a hard cap here. Instead, they get a lesson in political reality. The Swiss have shown that immigration can be managed without rupture. That is a dangerous message for those who want to turn the UK into a fortress.
Downing Street is already briefing. ‘The Swiss have demonstrated that a balanced, sovereign approach works,’ a No 10 source said. ‘We are on the right path.’ Expect a flurry of op-eds from ministers. Expect the Rwanda scheme to be reframed as ‘Swiss-style deterrence’.
But the real winner today is the centre ground. Rishi Sunak, who has walked a tightrope between Brexiteers and moderates, can now claim that the British model is not an outlier. It is European. It is mainstream. The Swiss have given him cover.
However, this is politics. Today’s vindication is tomorrow’s target. The Swiss result will not silence the sceptics. It will embolden them. They will argue that Switzerland has a different economy, different geography, different history. They will point to the 63% who voted against the cap, but note that turnout was low. There is always a ‘but’.
For now, though, the government has a trophy. A foreign referendum it can wave at its critics. The Labour Party is left scrambling. Keir Starmer, who has tried to corner the Tories on competence, now faces a narrative twist: the Swiss, masters of efficient governance, have chosen the British path.
What happens next? The Home Office will accelerate its ‘digital borders’ plans. The points system will be tweaked. A new ‘Swiss-style’ mobility scheme is already on the table. And the PM will use the result to rally his party at conference.
But the deeper game is about trust. The British public, like the Swiss, wants control. Not chaos. The Swiss have shown that you can have both. That is the story No 10 will tell. And for a government battered by strikes, inflation, and scandal, it is a rare gift.
One final note: spare a thought for the Swiss People’s Party. They spent millions on this campaign. They had the momentum. They lost. It is a reminder that referendums are not a cheat code for populists. They are a test of political persuasion. And the Swiss just taught the world – and Westminster – a lesson in maturity.









