Two out of five residents cannot speak English well or completely in parts of the country, MailOnline can reveal today.
By laying the shock size of how many people struggles with the language, our in -depth analysis includes all nearly 36,000 neighborhoods of England and the nearly 36,000 neighborhoods of Wales.
Reform UK claimed that the figures illustrated how immigration 'made integration into the British way of life almost impossible'.
In one zone east of the Leicester city center, 43 percent of the 16s speak little to no English.
The bag of North Evington consists of only a dozen streets and 1,670 people and is the home of two mosques, a Hindu temple, a baby school and a cinema.
It is part of an enclave of 34 neighborhoods that extend by Leicester's North Evington, Belgrave and nearby suburbs, where at least one fifth of the population cannot speak English.
MailOnline used 2021 Census data, of which the UK Statistics Authority (UKSA) says it is 'the most suitable' way to analyze the language skills of the English language.
With the same figures, the UKSA announced last month to the Tories that almost a million people in England cannot speak English or not at all. This was approximately two percent of the total population.
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Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said that the unveiling 'Begelaars Faith' and called for work to quickly 'get a grip on immigration', which has risen to a record high since the census was performed.
Our map breaks down the figures due to 'Super Output areas with the bottom layer' (LSOAS), communities consisting of approximately 1,000 to 3,000 people.
The darker the red, the higher percentage of residents has little to no English language skills.
Areas on our map are mentioned by the electoral department within the 300-plus local authorities of the country. You can select your local authority by searching in the bar at the top of the tool.
Adjacent areas can appear with the same name, but have different statistics. That's because every department may have countless LSOAs.
For example, there are ten cases of North Evington in Leicester, but the zone called Technical E01013656 has the lowest English understanding in the country.
Richard Tice, deputy leader of Reform UK, said MailOnline: 'After 14 years of total Tory -Mislukking on immigration, the chickens came home to ray.
'Opening the locks for millions of new people has made integration into the British way of life almost impossible, and these statistics are witnesses.
“This is not only a cultural problem, but also stacks extra pressure on public services, including the NHS, so that they can choose millions on translators that can be better spent on frontlin personnel.”
The Leicester city council is contacted for comment.
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Apart from Leicester, 28 percent inhabitants of a small sector in the city of Smethwick in West -Midlands cannot speak well.
The LSOA in Sandwell, called E01010049, is close to the Hoofdstraat and includes the Ford Street, Dibble Road and Sabell Road, as well as the allocations of Stony Lane. Regarding the overall ranking, it became 16th.
In a neighborhood of Elswick, Newcastle, which includes parts of about a dozen house roads, including Wellfield Road, almost 27 percent of the inhabitants have bad English skills. The area, called E01035618, is in 18th place.
More than 26 percent of the inhabitants in a neighborhood of Aldershot, Hampshire, including the Aldershot Military Town, cannot speak English or not at all. The LSOA in the Rushmoor District, called E01034730, became 20th.
Known as 'Little Nepal', Aldershot is the home of many members of the Gurkhas Brigade and their families, who were given the right to settle in the UK in 2009 after a powerful campaign by actress Joanna Lumley.
Data from the Census 2021 also shows that 10 percent of the more than 16 years born abroad have a poor or no understanding of the English language.
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More than half of the migrants older than 16 speak English as their first language (51.6 percent) and another 38.5 percent use it as a second, but speak 'good or very good'.
But 8.6 percent (810,720 people) 'cannot speak English' and 1.4 percent (140,858) 'cannot speak English at all'.
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch has blamed for a lack of integration for 'fraying' the ties that bind society. Last November she said that newcomers should buy in the values, customs and institutions that have attracted them here in the first place ', instead of trying to change the culture of this country.
Last month she also promised to prohibit migrants from establishing benefits of ever to establish in Great Britain, and to double the period to remain 'indefinite leave' of five to ten years.
The prime minister has promised to reduce immigration by stimulating the skills of British employees, but rather warned government advisers that this will not be guaranteed to reduce the number.
In her annual report, published in December, the Migration Advisory Committee warned the Prime Minister against a 'one size fits all' approach to limit arrivals to Great Britain.
Net migration, the difference between the number of people arriving and left the UK, reached a record 906,000 in the 12 months to June 2023, 166,000 higher than previously thought.
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Sir Keir previously accused the previous Tory government of changing Great Britain in a 'one-nation experiment in open borders'.
The prime minister also claimed that the British economy was 'hopelessly dependent on immigration' and promised to publish 'immantite' plans about how Labor would downline.
He said that the government would reform the points -based immigration system to train companies that have foreign employees, also to train British people and to combat the abuse of the visa system.
A government spokesperson said: “The government is regularly concerned with religious communities to promote strong working relationships.
“We work together with the local authorities to understand the home and integration needs of newcomers and how we can work together to guarantee positive results in communities.”