@toruzlv: :< #toruzlv #tinydoki #oikawa #iwaizumi #iwaoi #oikawatooru #iwaizumihajime #haikyuu #fypシ

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Region: PE
Saturday 29 January 2022 02:43:51 GMT
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duxjndee
alien🐞 :
I LOVE THEM SO FUCKING MUCH PLS😭😭😭😭😭
2022-01-29 10:39:11
1
moonwyhs
mari :
them 😁😁
2022-01-30 21:01:36
1
username30583810
906492 :
this ship is the best no one can change my mind
2022-01-29 11:19:15
19
miau_giss
gigi :3 :
me identifico con oikawa no estoy bien 👍
2022-01-29 03:42:17
26
linokazz
Megumi's boyfriend :
amo eles :((
2022-01-29 03:35:19
1
soundofval
soundofval :
amo tus edits <33
2022-01-29 03:13:24
1
camy.jacob
camylla :
eles<8
2022-02-07 16:32:24
1
kenmaagamerhaha
ᓚᘏᗢ :
nenens:(
2022-01-29 11:06:43
1
kiindabored
;) :
<3<3
2022-01-29 18:43:59
1
yllek1j
renatinha :
meus bebês ♡
2022-01-29 03:37:49
2
sbmrchlla
s. :
i love them sm :(
2022-01-29 05:23:17
1
denkiuyum
sopa d poronga :
@_tobionista_ 💔
2022-02-04 00:53:37
2
hytaogf
cíntia :
@evestiaa cries
2022-01-29 11:29:55
3
.secretaccount46
MADDY 💝🎀💓 :
@sercet.me
2022-02-23 04:42:22
1
kenmashouldbekuros
lyra🌙 :
@abikullaniciadiyok
2022-01-29 07:35:46
2
clare____
Clarence 🍉 :
@urlocalredheadd
2022-01-29 06:50:50
2
yksys08
idk :
:(
2022-02-12 17:51:19
1
frrogis
yaré :
:(
2022-02-23 14:20:15
1
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“800,000 people are due to qualify for indefinite leave to remain (ILR) over the course of the next few years. This press conference is to say, none of them will get it,” Nigel Farage claimed when questioned by Guardian reporter, Eleni Courea, on plans to revoke ILR. The Reform UK leader threatened hundreds of thousands of legal immigrants with deportation by pledging to abolish indefinite leave to remain during a press conference. Farage said this group – which he called the “Boriswave” because they arrived under post-Brexit changes made by Boris Johnson – tended to be young and low-skilled and were “going to be a huge burden on the state” by claiming benefits. Reform’s central claim that the move would save £230bn was called into question when it emerged that it had been sourced from a Centre for Policy Studies report whose authors said the figure “should not be used” because it was based on erroneous data. Asked by journalists – including Elemis Courea - whether he would withdraw the £230bn figure in light of this, Farage said it was “without a doubt too low” and “underestimates things”. He did not provide a source for his claim that most migrants relied on benefits, saying he was “firmly of the belief with research backing it up” that more than 50% of the people due to become eligible for ILR in the next few years “are not working, have not worked and in all probability will never, ever work”. He left open the possibility that families in the UK could be broken up and that Ukrainians and Hongkongers who moved here using special resettlement routes could have their rights to remain revoked. Reform clarified that its policy of abolishing ILR would not apply to EU immigrants with settled status, raising further questions about the policy’s promised savings. Government sources said 770,000 universal credit claimants who are EU citizens would be exempt from the change. Estimates from the Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford put the total population of non-EU citizens with ILR at 430,000 at the end of 2024. British prime minister Keir Starmer is preparing to make a major speech pledging to take the fight to Farage and proposing that the UK will reject division and hate fuelled by the far-right. His intervention will come before the Labour conference this weekend, as pressure mounts on Starmer from senior party figures who argue that he should take a more impassioned stance against Reform and rising racism in Britain. 
‌What does “Boriswave” mean and what is its political significance? Read our new explainer via the link in bio.
“800,000 people are due to qualify for indefinite leave to remain (ILR) over the course of the next few years. This press conference is to say, none of them will get it,” Nigel Farage claimed when questioned by Guardian reporter, Eleni Courea, on plans to revoke ILR. The Reform UK leader threatened hundreds of thousands of legal immigrants with deportation by pledging to abolish indefinite leave to remain during a press conference. Farage said this group – which he called the “Boriswave” because they arrived under post-Brexit changes made by Boris Johnson – tended to be young and low-skilled and were “going to be a huge burden on the state” by claiming benefits. Reform’s central claim that the move would save £230bn was called into question when it emerged that it had been sourced from a Centre for Policy Studies report whose authors said the figure “should not be used” because it was based on erroneous data. Asked by journalists – including Elemis Courea - whether he would withdraw the £230bn figure in light of this, Farage said it was “without a doubt too low” and “underestimates things”. He did not provide a source for his claim that most migrants relied on benefits, saying he was “firmly of the belief with research backing it up” that more than 50% of the people due to become eligible for ILR in the next few years “are not working, have not worked and in all probability will never, ever work”. He left open the possibility that families in the UK could be broken up and that Ukrainians and Hongkongers who moved here using special resettlement routes could have their rights to remain revoked. Reform clarified that its policy of abolishing ILR would not apply to EU immigrants with settled status, raising further questions about the policy’s promised savings. Government sources said 770,000 universal credit claimants who are EU citizens would be exempt from the change. Estimates from the Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford put the total population of non-EU citizens with ILR at 430,000 at the end of 2024. British prime minister Keir Starmer is preparing to make a major speech pledging to take the fight to Farage and proposing that the UK will reject division and hate fuelled by the far-right. His intervention will come before the Labour conference this weekend, as pressure mounts on Starmer from senior party figures who argue that he should take a more impassioned stance against Reform and rising racism in Britain. ‌What does “Boriswave” mean and what is its political significance? Read our new explainer via the link in bio.

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