LONDON: On June 23, it will be exactly 10 years since the UK voted narrowly to leave the EU, a decision driven primarily by concerns about what politicians campaigning for Brexit described as “out-of-control immigration.” Britain, insisted the UK Independence Party in the run-up to the 2016 referendum, had to leave the EU in order to get control over its borders. Since then, however, successive governments have failed to address public concerns about immigration.

A decade on from the referendum that led to Britain's exit from the European Union, the issue continues to divide and drive debate in Westminster.

The UK’s vote to leave the EU helped spark a populist wave. A decade on, voters are unhappy. Is a reset coming?