Introduction
What do these people have in common - the editor of
Private Eye, the Conservative who holds the record for the fastest time ever run in the
London Marathon by a Member of Parliament, the fourth best golfer on earth, and
the residents of Rathlin Island? Answer?[1]
Everybody knows that 51.9% of votes cast in the UK
referendum supported the campaign to leave the European Union.
The consequent response of the Government at
Westminster is loud and unambiguously clear:-
“we
must now prepare for the process to exit (sic) the EU.[2]”
The new Prime Minister of the UK says (and she really means
it)
“Brexit
means Brexit.”
The people have spoken.
The Government has a mandate and legislative authority to act on the people’s verdict. There is no going back. Whatever our reaction, the UK has to plan and
is adjusting to the new reality of life without Europe.
Reflection
The outcome, however, has shocked many people and
institutions both at home and abroad.
A month and counting after the vote, the doubts fail to be quelled in spite of the confident message from the Government.
Rather than simply ignoring the groundswell of malcontent opinion and conscious of remarks by people like the editor of Private Eye,[3] a review of lessons learnt and some listening might just go some way to help to heal the wounds of a bruising and divisive campaign. It might even build an element of consensus.
Rather than simply ignoring the groundswell of malcontent opinion and conscious of remarks by people like the editor of Private Eye,[3] a review of lessons learnt and some listening might just go some way to help to heal the wounds of a bruising and divisive campaign. It might even build an element of consensus.
It is easy with hindsight to criticise the Remain camp
for failing to persuade the electorate of the wisdom contained in evidence that
came from business, science and education.
That expertise outlined the consequences of withdrawal on research and
development.
Remain also undersold the expert
warnings from a vast array of institutions like the Bank of England, Her Majesty’s
Treasury, the IMF and others. These
bodies produced a litany of knowledge about the impact of Brexit on the
economy.
Likewise, the Leave camp’s campaign lost credibility
both before and especially after the result. A certain poster, an ex-post
admission of telling lies about extra funding for the NHS and the disavowal of
the empirical evidence from economists and scientists dishonoured their
case. The quip that the country is sick
of experts undermined the honesty of the mandate to leave.
People are entitled to have doubts and second thoughts,
especially when they hear Brexit proponents state that they were untruthful
in the campaign. Public concerns
heighten when negative impacts on our economy[4] emerge. For example, following initial record slides
in foreign exchange values, there are predictions of further devaluation of
sterling.
The current predicament is partly the fault of Parliament
and the inadequate thought that was given to the drafting of the
legislation. The European Referendum Act
of December 2015 received an overwhelming support from MPs. Given the constitutional magnitude of the
issue, it is surprising that the elected law-makers failed to set a threshold
for the winning result or for minimum turnout.
Expressing the numbers in context (using the Electoral Commission’s
figures),[5] almost 17½ million people
out of a total electorate of 46½ million voted for a British exit. Expressed in other words, this “majority”
comprises of 38% of the UK’s electorate.
On the basis of the votes of less than two-fifths of the total
electorate, we are now resigning our membership of the European Union.
Impact on the Four Nations
Breaking down the results into what the BBC and others,
including the new Prime Minister, describe as the UK’s four nations, two of
them (England and Wales) voted by clear majorities to leave the EU (although
their capital cities London and Cardiff voted to remain in); while in the other
two nations (Scotland and Northern Ireland) the majority voted to remain.
There are many consequent concerns about the overall impact
on the UK of the decision to withdraw from the EU. One is the effect on social cohesion, another is
the impact on our economy. There are also
legal and constitutional issues.
How cohesive is this union of four nations as the United Kingdom embarks on dissolving its union with Europe?
How cohesive is this union of four nations as the United Kingdom embarks on dissolving its union with Europe?
England
Legal moves are happening in England. A leading law firm in London has launched a
challenge to prevent the Government from triggering Brexit and Article 50 of
the Lisbon Treaty without an Act of Parliament[6].
Furthermore, one thousand barristers -1000 expert and well-paid lawyers - have written to the Prime
Minister saying that the referendum result is advisory and not legally
binding[7]. They argue that Government should order an
independent investigation into the pros and cons of withdrawal before making
exit plans. Pointedly, one EU law
specialist barrister says that “unilateral action to trigger A50 will further
divide us.”
On the issue of social cohesion and specifically
race relations and immigration, the respected English journalist and former Conservative MP
Matthew Parris has written about his feeling of shame about being British.[8] In his words
“The
reliance of the leaders and opinion leaders of the Leave campaign upon
resentment of foreigners, dislike of immigration and — in many cases — hatred
of immigrants, has been absolutely disgraceful.
Anti-immigrant feeling won it for Leave, and they know it...”
Another journalist, Mark Townsend writing in the Observer
(3 July) has described a fivefold rise in the number of racist attacks in the
week immediately after the referendum.[9]
Four days before the referendum took place, the Irish
Times columnist Fintan O’Toole described how and why what he calls “English
Nationalism” underpins Brexit[10]. In
compelling detail, he explains how it fails to meet four of the five
characteristics or assets of national independence movements, with its
“inexorable logic” being a standalone England.
Wales
There is evidence that a statistically significant
section of the Welsh nation has changed its mind.[11] Apparently some Leave voters there are
experiencing what is being dubbed Bregret.
A Metro poll indicates a majority now in favour of voting Remain in the
aftermath of the initial consequences of the result to leave.
In similar vein, a BBC reporter summarised the reaction
in Wales to the country’s prospects following the appointment of the new
PM. He indicated[12] that the governing Labour
Party in Wales will be watching carefully, its electorate having voted to leave
the EU, to see if the UK government delivers on the Leave promise to replace EU
funding with Treasury money.
Scotland
& Northern Ireland
For the citizens and the devolved administrations of
Scotland and Northern Ireland, questions arise about the democratic legitimacy
of these nations being compelled to have their membership of the EU terminated
against the popular will of their people.
When the former Prime Minister of the UK John Major
visited Northern Ireland campaigning for a Remain vote, he warned that a second
referendum could not be denied to Scotland if Brexit achieve a majority. Now, it seems, that is likely to happen. In the interim, there is also the prospect
that Scotland’s Parliament will withhold its consent to Westminster legislation
for formal withdrawal from the EU.
Since the establishment of devolved power to Stormont
many years ago, the ruling politicians in Northern Ireland have always reminded
the minority of the primacy of majority rule within its jurisdiction. Now the largest governing party plans to deprive its majority of
continued union with Europe.
And yet, Northern Ireland’s First Minister sought to explain
away “our wee country’s” vote in favour of remaining in the EU. “We always knew that this would happen since
four of the five regional parties campaigned to Remain.” Perhaps the issue was that the undefined “we”
did not really campaign and did not articulate a case supported by empirical
evidence.
The office of Northern Ireland’s First Minister has published
useful guidelines which emphasise the need for policy-making to be
evidence-based. Whereas the Scottish Government produced detailed support[13] to back the policy for
its independence referendum, no evidence-based strategy was made to the
Northern Ireland nation in favour of withdrawal from the European Union.
The risks for Government acting without rigorous evidence have been graphically illustrated recently in the UK.[14] Evidence to explain the loss of public trust in Government?
The risks for Government acting without rigorous evidence have been graphically illustrated recently in the UK.[14] Evidence to explain the loss of public trust in Government?
Following the announcement of the victory for Brexit, Fintan
O’Toole published an article concentrating on the impact of withdrawal on the
UK’s only land border with the EU and the consequences for the 1998 Good Friday
Agreement[15]. English Nationalists, he argued, have
jeopardised the settlement that has brought peace to Northern Ireland and
cordiality to relations between England and Ireland. He predicts that the old border will return
and will become both a customs and also an immigration barrier.
He addresses the campaign promise of Brexiters to remove the European Convention on Human Rights from UK law. Because the 1998 Agreement incorporates the
European Convention into Northern Ireland law this removal, he argues, would undermine
the basis of the Agreement. Given his plea to the electorate that the UK
must take back control, the action of the new Foreign Secretary (as well as
the Secretaries for Brexit and for Justice) will be followed with interest not just in Northern Ireland, but in the USA, Europe and the Republic of Ireland.
The European debate has become a huge topic of
conversation for everybody, not just the political élite. For example, even the
apolitical Rory McIlroy expressed a point of view suggestive of disappointment
with the result.[16]
“If
I’m Northern Irish, what’s better? To be part of the UK and not be in the EU? Or to be in a united Ireland and still belong
to the EU? People are going to have to weigh that up.”
One recent scoop gives credence to the dangers of a Kingdom disuniting. So serious is the problem that even the the UK's smallest nation may be affected. It is reliably reported that Northern Ireland could experience its own fragmentation. This has emerged as an option for its only inhabited off-shore island.[17] The suggestion is that
Rathlin Island could separate from a disintegrating UK and join an independent
Scotland within the EU.
[1]
Conscientious concerns about the result of the Brexit referendum
[2]
Official Government response on 9 July 2015 to the public petition not to
trigger Article 50.
[4] http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/pound-sterling-argentine-peso-worst-performing-currency-eu-referendum-brexit-a7127246.html
[5] http://www.electoralcommission.org.uk/find-information-by-subject/elections-and-referendums/upcoming-elections-and-referendums/eu-referendum/electorate-and-count-information
[6] http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-legal-challenge-launched-businesses-move-to-block-eu-exit-without-act-of-parliament-a7118186.html
[11] http://metro.co.uk/2016/07/05/wales-has-now-changed-its-mind-over-brexit-two-weeks-too-late-5987173/?ito=facebook
[12]
BBC 10 o’clock news Hywel Griffith report
[13]
Scotland’s Future. Your Guide to an independent Scotland. 648pp. November 2013
[14]
http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/uk/chilcot-tony-blairs-iraq-policy-based-on-flawed-intelligence-which-was-not-challenged-34860941.html?utm_source=Newsweaver&utm_medium=email&utm_term=Chilcot%3A+Tony+Blairs+Iraq+policy+based+on+flawed+intelligence+which+was+not+challenged&utm_campaign=Chilcot%3A+Tony+Blair%27s+Iraq+policy+%27based+on+flawed+intelligence+which+was+not+challenged%27
[15] https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/jun/24/northern-irish-peace-sacrificed-english-nationalism
Guardian 24 June 2016.
[17] http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/northern-ireland/rathlin-island-residents-consider-joining-an-independent-scotland-following-brexit-34873184.html?utm_source=Newsweaver&utm_medium=email&utm_term=Rathlin+Island+residents+consider+joining+an+independent+Scotland+following+Brexit&utm_campaign=UVF+blamed+for+huge+rise+in+tyres+on+bonfires
Report in the Observer 9 October 2016 quoting the experienced and influential Conservative peer who drafted Article 50 and his concerns about Brexit policy of the new Government:-
ReplyDeletehttps://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/oct/08/article-50-lord-kerr-calls-vote-brexit-terms
And this post (7 October 2016) from Scotland's First Minister reacting to the Conservative Party Conference's policy announcements on Brexit contrasts sharply with that of the Northern Ireland First Minister:-
https://www.facebook.com/notes/nicola-sturgeon/wearescotland/1235516486490265
Having quoted the respected journalist and former Conservative MP expressing his feelings of being ashamed to be British in the face of Leave's anti-immigrant campaign, I read with interest his article in today's Times (15 Oct 2016). Mr Parris warns of the dire consequences likely because of the lack of a plan by the new Government:-
ReplyDeletehttp://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/were-heading-for-the-biggest-crisis-since-suez-vhqxzcpl7?shareToken=fbb277840475c158f18567a8536ee2df
As Brexiters attempt to stifle debate about the UK's divorce from the EU, the Observer (Sunday 16 October 2016)pens an eloquent editorial:- https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/oct/15/brexit-parliament-debate-article-50
ReplyDeleteA report in the Belfast Telegraph (24 Oct 2016) about the IfG think-tank's view that the UK could face a full-blown constitutional crisis over Brexit:-
ReplyDeletehttp://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/northern-ireland/warning-uk-could-split-if-brexit-deal-is-forced-on-regions-35154690.html?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=BT:DailyNews&hConversionEventId=AQEAAZQF2gAmdjIwMDAwMDE1Ny1mNjVkLWQ4MTMtYmRjMi02NjE2M2VmYmIyYjbaACRjNmVlYjlkYi01ZTM5LTRhMDctMDAwMC0wMjFlZjNhMGJjZGbaACQzNjI0OTRmNC04NTdlLTRjOTgtOTFiMi0zOGUxZWJkZTMzZmb3xnTVqo1RbqrIWYTvCwX_0awW4oD9ivPPykab0HhKwQ
A Belfast Telegraph article 16 Jan 2017 - potential impact of NI political crisis on Brexit & A 50:- http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/opinion/news-analysis/northern-ireland-election-could-become-rerun-of-the-eu-referendum-35369244.html
ReplyDeleteAnother interesting article from Fintan O'Toole about Brexit, this time in the Irish Times 17 Jan 2017:- http://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/fintan-o-toole-dup-must-be-punished-for-its-brexit-folly-1.2938690
ReplyDeleteComment by Richard Dawkins on Newsnight, BBC2, on 9 March 2017:-
ReplyDeletehttp://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-39218108?SThisFB
Mark Mardell,BBC presenter of "The World this Weekend" poses the question (20 March 2017) - Could Brexit mean a Referendum in Northern Ireland?:-
ReplyDeletehttp://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-politics-39328073
Interesting article in the Observer New Review 23 April 2017 about Brexit's impact on the UK's only EU land border:- https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/apr/23/northern-ireland-brexit-border-old-wounds-troubles
ReplyDeleteAn article dated 1 July 2017 by David Murphy RTE's business correspondent about the terms of the Brexit aspect of the CP/DUP deal.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.rte.ie/news/business/2017/0629/886602-did-arlene-foster-sell-out-on-brexit/