Tuesday, 24 September 2019

Omnes ad unum, the Conservatives and DUP



Unlawfulness

The unanimous ruling of the UK’s Supreme Court that the prorogation of Parliament was unlawful, that “the effect on the fundamentals of democracy was extreme,[i]” is welcome.
The Conservative Government and the DUP leaderships have let the UK down.

Mandate

Given the Court’s emphasis on democracy, let’s consider the latter party.  Northern Ireland’s largest political party proudly displays its credentials on its name emphasising “democratic” as the first of two adjectives.

On the big issue of the era, however, the DUP does not represent the majority of Northern Ireland’s electorate which voted three years ago to remain in the EU.  They lack a mandate in Great Britain, with no MPs or District Councillors in England, Scotland or in Wales.  Unsurprisingly, their attempt to woo London voters in 2016 with expensive advertising in the Metro newspaper was rejected when the UK’s capital voted substantially to remain in the EU. 

Yet they wielded influence on Teresa May’s minority Conservative Government after she lost her majority in Parliament when failing to achieve the opposite in a General Election.  The CP/DUP arrangement is criticised as impugning the impartiality required of the UK Government in discharging its crucial co-guarantor role for the Good Friday Agreement.   

Nevertheless, the DUP has continued its support for the Conservative Government under Boris Johnson.  Its influence changed, however, when the PM deprived his own administration of its working majority by expelling 21 MPs who rebelled in a crucial vote.  At 10 pm on 3 September, all ten DUP MPs discovered their loss of clout on the Government.  Purged of the Father of the House and 20 like-minded Conservative “rebels,” they failed to defeat Hilary Benn’s bill which blocks a no deal Brexit.  The losing margin for the Government’s no-deal stance was 28 votes.  

The DUP has been uncompromising in supporting the new PM’s strategy which has been based on his “do or die” in a ditch “come what May” maxims to leave the EU by 31 October, deal or no deal, not forgetting “no ifs no buts.”  CP/DUP as one, “Omnes ad Unum.”   

Following the fondness of her party’s founder for multiple negatives (“Never, never , never” protesting against the 1985 Anglo-Irish Agreement), the current leader resorted to a double-negative that “the DUP is not a no-deal party.[ii] Juxtaposed beside DUP support for the new PM’s strategy, one stretches to explain the paradox. Perhaps George Orwell’s concept “doublethink[iii]” applies.

The DUP provided unequivocal endorsement for the controversial prorogation of Parliament for 5 weeks.  I was going to add that at least the DUP take their seats in Westminster – but, familiar with Stormont’s closure, they supported the unlawful suspension of the Mother of Parliaments.  The irony was nailed with satirical precision[iv] by the Ulster Fry.

Analysis of close votes in the Commons demonstrates the adverse impact of closed for business.  Sinn Féin’s mandate to stay away from Westminster probably pleases the DUP.  Abstention, however, ranks as an abrogation of electoral responsibility. It disenfranchises its electoral base and it denies electors a voice where key decisions are made on constitutional and other matters.  Attendance at Westminster could have nullified or lessened the voting quantum of DUP rivals.  

On 11 September, two days into the closure of Parliament, the Inner Court of Session in Edinburgh ruled that the Government’s prorogation decision was unlawful.  It was ruled as an attempt to “stymie” (meaning thwart) the House of Commons and prevent MPs from scrutinising the Government over Brexit.  

As one correspondent expressed it, the three judges did not accept the veracity of the Government’s stated rationale for suspension.  For the DUP whose loyalty to the Crown is displayed on its leader’s lapel, it must have been agonising to be complicit in drawing the monarch into politics; and even more so to see Her Majesty consenting on 28 August to the use of her own royal prerogative for an unlawful act.  To have the Scottish judges’ decision upheld by the Supreme Court must turn agony into humiliation.

Good Friday Agreement

The DUP leader argues that the UK/EU Withdrawal Agreement’s “backstop” insurance policy is unacceptable to all unionists.[v]  Evidence contradicts that stance.  Results of a new survey[vi] by Lord Ashcroft reveal that 20% of unionists are prepared to accept the backstop.  The party leader’s assertion to speak for all unionists is cast into doubt.

She ignores that the insurance policy commands strong support from business and farming organisations, apolitical bodies which are neutral on the union.  Any suggestion that a legal insurance policy to retain frictionless trade across Ireland splits the electorate on tribal unionist/nationalist grounds seems counter-intuitive.

Consistency is an issue for the DUP.  The party’s chief whip asserts that the backstop is “in clear conflict” with the GFA because it has no unionist support.[vii] He cites no quantitative evidence to verify his claim nor does he rebut the Ashcroft survey.  Instead his logic points to the opposite conclusion which is that Brexit contradicts the GFA because it lacks consent across the community of Northern Ireland.

Rhetoric

The DUP has earned its reputation and democratic credentials since its inception through booming and sometimes bellicose public discourse.   It occasionally still reverts to type, as the recent smear[viii] about “dirty Dublin tricks” reveals.  To witness its current leadership warning others to “dial down the rhetoric” seems disingenuous, arguably hypocritical.  On 1 August the party leader instructed Taoiseach Leo Varadkar to dial down his rhetoric[ix] following comments that moderate unionists and nationalists will query being forced into a hard Brexit which threatens the economy, north and south.

It came as a surprise, therefore, that there was no call the next day from her to Jonathan Powell (Downing Street Chief of Staff 1997-2007 and GFA negotiator for the UK Government) when he said that Boris Johnson will “abandon” the DUP for a free trade deal; and when Barbara Gray the Assistant Chief Constable of the PSNI argued that a no-deal Brexit could prompt an upsurge in republican violence,[x] no call emanated from the DUP complaining of dialled-up rhetoric; and likewise on 3 September when the credit ratings agency DBRS warned that a hard Brexit could reignite sectarian violence and a break-up of the UK[xi] there was no clamour about rhetoric. 

What they will make of David Cameron, the father of the referendum, and his rhetoric about the current PM and Minister for no deal planning (“leaving the truth at home”).  Fact or fiction, or perhaps you couldn’t make up this stuff?   Are Boris Johnson and Michael Gove really being called liars, who would have thought it? 

On which subject, an essay by the Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Warwick University[xii] revisits George Orwell’s dire warning about the link between the state of a language and the condition of politics.  “Brexiteers,” he says, “subscribe to a myth of English exceptionalism, as inscribed in their God-given fundamentalist language – now demonstrably a language for lying in.”  He cites the new PM’s description of his opponents as “collaborators” and a “junta.”  The author recalls the wartime slogan that “careless talk costs lives” adding that, if Brexit leads to shortages of medical supplies, that slogan might become all the more important.

Evidence-based policy making

When Government ignores facts and figures, its reputation suffers and problems arise sooner or later. This failing adversely affected the Labour Party Government because of its dismissal of evidence for the war in Iraq.  A plethora of expert research articulates alarming economic impacts of Brexit[xiii] heralding many issues that warrant urgent political attention. The expert data, however, have regularly dismissed as “project fear” or forgotten during and since the referendum.  

I have asked the DUP earlier this year for the evidential basis behind its opposition to the UK’s membership of the EU.[xiv]  A reply is awaited. 

The trend of dismissing evidence has continued this summer.  On 18 August when the Sunday Times published the Government’s plans for no-deal Brexit (Operation Yellowhammer) revealing food, fuel and medicine shortages because of Brexit, the evidence was explained away by Cabinet Ministers as “old.”  This was in spite of the fact that the dossier was compiled by the Cabinet Office almost a fortnight after the election of a new PM by 92,153 Conservative Party members.  

An abbreviated 5-page version of the Yellowhammer report has since been published (11 September), with the addition of the term “worst case scenario” to the title.  That extra phrase contradicts the leaked report when a senior Whitehall source told the Sunday Times – “this is not project Fear, this is the most realistic assessment of what the public face with no deal.  These are likely, basic, reasonable scenarios, not the worst case.[xv]

Not only has the Conservative Government and DUP failed to rebut evidence, but worse, they have produced no contrary evidence as a basis for their aggressive exit strategy.  Does either party know more than experts such as the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, the Office for Budget Responsibility, the Bank of England, the Department for the Economy (NI), and others?  And how is it logical that the Government of the UK does not believe its own expert research?

Every day apolitical organisations publish information which demonstrates the threats of Brexit.  For example, the Bank of England warns[xvi] that with a no-deal Brexit, “very big and highly profitable industries in the UK would become uneconomic.”   
And 2/5 of members of Northern Ireland’s Chamber of Commerce and Trade would move part or all of their businesses overseas in the event of a no-deal Brexit.[xvii]  And a new report from the body E-Surgery[xviii] corroborates one element of Yellowhammer.  It indicates that 59 medicinal drugs needed to treat breast cancer, epilepsy, diabetes, and heart failure could become impossible to access.

Community cohesion and neighbourliness

On the issue of the DUP’s pledge to protect the union of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Brexit has divided the whole of society, public opinion and political parties within the “United” Kingdom.  It has adversely affected the reputation of its Parliamentary democracy abroad[xix] and domestically as minority Government after minority Government struggle to agree on what Brexit means and on an exit strategy.  Businesses across the UK, on both sides of the Irish border, and in Europe have had cope with economic uncertainty,[xx] political unpredictability at Westminster and to invest heavily in Brexit planning. 

Most worryingly, the exposure of the UK’s unwritten constitution[xxi] has been laid bare as “feeble” and “a byword for democratic fragility.”  Does the CP/DUP partnership’s unlawful suspension of Parliament protect or endanger the reputation of “the precious union?”  Do their actions to make it a more attractive proposition?

People in Northern Ireland voted to remain in the EU based on empirical evidence.  Divorce from the EU is a threat to our economy and to peace.  Given the decision to leave, we must protect our interests from the scenarios predicted by the evidence.  If the Brexit campaign pledge that it will be easy and quick to renegotiate a new UK/EU trade deal means anything (and which helped win the referendum), there will be no “border in the Irish Sea.” 

Even if there were one, it would be a trade barrier and not a constitutional border because Northern Ireland has not voted to leave the UK - at this time.  The only evidence of imminent threat to “the precious union,” a salutary warning for the DUP, comes from Scotland whose concerns about self-respect, legitimacy and engaging with the outside world Europe speak eloquently.[xxii]

The erection of new trade barriers between the UK and Europe, down the North Sea and The Channel, are objectionable to most Scottish and Northern Irish electors.  They voted to remain in the EU without barriers to our European trade.  

Northern Ireland accommodates the UK’s only EU land border.  The case for continuation of a thriving single island open economy is unimpeachable.  Even accepting the self-harm that the unforced unilateral act of Brexit will effect on the UK, there is no justification for punishing our neighbours.  What is the CP/DUP alliance thinking?  
The Supreme Court ruling exposes CP/DUP decision-making at a fundamental level.

Northern Ireland wants to continue peaceful living and trading without political or criminal hindrance across jurisdictions in Ireland and internationally. 


©Michael McSorley 2019


[i] BBC News 24 September 2019 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-49810261
[ii] BBC News 18 September 2019 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-49747203
[iii] “Politics and the English Language” George Orwell 1946 Doublethink is the power of holding two contradictory beliefs simultaneously and accepting both.
[iv]The Ulster Fry 10 September 2019  https://theulsterfry.com/politics/rest-of-uk-adopts-northern-irelands-no-government-policy/
[v] BBC Radio Ulster Good Morning Ulster Arlene Foster interview 11 September 2019
[vi] Lord Ashcroft Survey 11 September 2019 https://sluggerotoole.com/2019/09/11/ashcroft-poll-on-support-the-backstop-reunification-and-party-leaders/
[vii] Belfast Telegraph 16 September 2019 https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/uk/there-is-still-time-to-find-solution-to-irish-brexit-border-issue-insists-dups-donaldson-38500139.html?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=BT:DailyNews&hConversionEventId=AQEAAZQF2gAmdjQwMDAwMDE2ZC0zOWMwLTMzMTItYmVjOC0wMTE2M2VhYjRmOTPaACRlN2U2MjBiOS0xY2NiLTRlZjEtMDAwMC0wMjFlZjNhMGJjZDTaACQ3NTFiODAzYi0xMGE5LTQxZjAtYTE1ZS1iZTM2NWQzNTlmMGFbHRrZ_otLdxwmTkn9RXaQnLf7V9qYJHGaED8e_iwf7A
[viii] Belfast Telegraph 12 September 2019 https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/business/northern-ireland/blow-for-belfast-as-ryanair-and-aer-lingus-cut-routes-38490545.html
[ix] Belfast Telegraph 1 August 2019 https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/northern-ireland/leo-varadkar-rejects-arlene-fosters-project-fear-claim-saying-all-should-be-afraid-of-nodeal-brexit-38366151.html
[x] Irish Times 31 August 2019 p1
[xi] Irish Times Peter Hamilton 4 September 2019 https://www.irishtimes.com/business/economy/severe-hard-brexit-could-reignite-sectarian-violence-ratings-agency-says-1.4007451
[xii] Irish Times The Ticket 14 September 2019 Thomas Docherty https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/decay-of-english-language-makes-it-perfect-for-lying-1.4012377
[xiii] https://michaelmcsorleyeconomy.blogspot.com/2019/07/how-can-uks-new-pm-resolve-brexit.html
[xiv] https://michaelmcsorleyeconomy.blogspot.com/2019/03/brexit-briefings-to-dup-mp-jan-feb-2019.html
[xv] The Times 19 August 2019 https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/operation-chaos-whitehalls-secret-no-deal-brexit-plan-leaked-j6ntwvhll

[xvi] BBC News 2 August 2019 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-49203426
[xvii] Belfast Telegraph Business 13 September 2019 https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/business/northern-ireland/firms-planning-to-quit-northern-ireland-if-there-is-hard-brexit-survey-38492309.html?fbclid=IwAR3I8AY5qCpzOQBssQY7giMPlILGhvKMpbRU5cUscwxE4YbLejep_k_NhE0
[xviii] Belfast Telegraph 13 September 2019 https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/brexit/revealed-59-vital-medicines-that-may-be-impossible-to-get-if-the-uk-crashes-out-of-europe-38492903.html
[xix] Observer 4 August 2019 https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/aug/04/how-does-the-rest-of-the-world-currently-view-the-uk-brexit-boris-johnson
[xx] The Times 27 July 2019 Sterling’s fall in value Investors rattled by Johnson’s appointment
[xxi] Irish Times 3 September 2019 Fintan O’Toole https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/fintan-o-toole-welcome-to-the-united-kingdom-of-absurdistan-1.4005396?fbclid=IwAR0jlz5cG4t5WAC3mz-1_pgZttGdZsLnD1rhTZjqBrzE-7TSA2Xg4MNtuAo
[xxii] 18 September 2019 https://sluggerotoole.com/2019/09/18/if-scotland-eventually-goes-brexit-may-have-given-it-a-hefty-shove-out-the-door/

Tuesday, 23 July 2019

How can the UK's new PM resolve the Brexit conundrum?


On June 24 2019, the third anniversary of the Brexit referendum, the party responsible for gifting the referendum to the UK was enjoying a tortuous process of electing its second post-referendum leader with a mandate from 160,000 party members to be Prime Minister.  

In the interim, the Conservative Party had been spooked by the electoral consequences of missing two exit deadlines (29 March as well as the 12 April extension).  It suffered substantial losses in English Local Government elections (2 May) and again in elections to the European Parliament (23 May).  Another failure to meet the exit deadline is seen as potentially calamitous for the party of Government. 
For this reason a General Election is low on Conservative MPs’ priority lists.

Will Boris Johnson’s new Administration succeed in divorcing the UK from the EU at Hallowe’en 2019, “come what may” “do or die?”  
Will he deliver on his campaign pledges on public expenditure?  And will he deliver on the objectives of Brexit, whatever they are, more than three years after the mandate to get out?

Other crucial questions remain unanswered regardless of the weeks of leadership campaigning and pledging.
How can “the party of business” justify divorcing the UK from the EU when the authoritative research still predicts negative consequences?  What evidence does the new PM have to rebut the plethora of data which show that leaving the EU will be bad for the UK?

As the nation begins a fourth post-referendum year still a member of the EU, Parliamentary democracy has laboured in a quagmire of resignations, political indecision, and electoral rebuff at local government and EU polls for Labour and Conservative Parties; compounded by business anxiety, community division and speculation over the spectre of constitutional break-up.

This analysis is supported in recent polling by think-tank Britainthinks.  It suggests that “bitter political debate over leaving the EU has shattered public trust in the way the nation is governed.[i]
Voters on both sides of the argument – the general public - feel frustrated and alienated from the political system as the public discourse has affected the UK’s self-image and reputation abroad.  Where has it all gone wrong?

Answers are needed if Government has any chance of resolving the discord about a “red white and blue Brexit” that wracks “the precious union.”  It’s arguable that Brexit has been flawed from the start - a combination of poor leadership, non-evidence-based policy-making, ignoring expert analyses, illegal electoral activity, telling lies, and the absence of a strategy to implement and to monitor the process of divorce.

The time is opportune to brief the new PM, to give him time to take stock of facts - to remind him firstly how we got to where we are, and secondly, to present recent evidence of Brexit’s impact on the UK economy,  impacts on Northern Ireland, and finally the impacts on Ireland.

1.    H.M Parliament’s lead role

·         In stark contrast to the unbridgeable division which has dominated Parliamentary debate subsequently, the European Referendum Act was passed in December 2015 overwhelmingly.   In so doing, its elected law-makers set no threshold for a victory or for a minimum turn-out.  In practice, therefore, a simple majority which comprised of less than 2/5 of the nation’s voters sufficed as the legal basis for the UK’s constitutional change. The vaunted figure of 17.4 million people who voted in June 2016 to leave represents 38% of the UK’s total electorate of 46.5 million.  Some 29.1 million people did not vote for Brexit. 

·         The validity of the referendum result remains open to dispute because of the Electoral Commission’s finding in July 2018 of electoral fraud.  Exactly one year on from the breaking of the Cambridge Analytica scandal by a UK newspaper, we were reminded[ii] in March of the Electoral Commission’s conclusion that Vote Leave broke UK electoral law in funnelling money to the data firm Aggregate IQ.  Consequently Vote Leave was fined and referred to the police.

·         Whereas the Scottish Government published a 650-page report[iii] informing its electorate about the prospect of independence prior to its referendum, no such detail was published by Westminster to inform the Brexit campaign. 

·         Post-referendum the same approach has prevailed. The Department responsible for the UK’s departure from the EU carried out no economic impact assessments on any sector of the UK economy.  The then Secretary of State for Brexit David Davis admitted this to a House of Commons Select Committee in December 2017.[iv]  Is failure to base policy on evidence maladministration or incompetence?

2.    Impacts on the UK economy – recent analysis

·         The evidence published during the last nine months suggests that the citizens of the UK will be worse off economically as a result of Brexit, whether the divorce is hard or soft.  In November 2018, the UK Government’s own analysis[v] reported that Brexit will cause adverse impacts ranging from 3.9% shrinkage of the economy after 15 years to 9.3% under a no-deal exit.   In similar vein, the CBI warned in January 2019 that the risks of a no-deal are unmanageable.[vi]   In February 2019 the Bank of England[vii] produced data indicating the UK’s lowest growth since 2009. The Bank Governor spoke about the sharp fall in business investment in the “fog of Brexit.”  The Office of National Statistics endorsed[viii] the Bank’s research saying that adverse impacts are already happening in February 2019 before Brexit happens.  For example, in the final three months of 2018 production of cars, steel products and construction fell sharply; and the UK’s GDP shrank by 0.4% in December. 

·         Also in February 2019, a no deal impact assessment published by Government [ix] said that no deal could leave the UK economy 6.3-9% smaller after 15 years than if it remained in the EU, and that no deal would affect the viability of many businesses in Northern Ireland some of which might relocate to the Republic of Ireland.   It repeated HM Treasury’s assessment of November 2018 that the overall impact of no deal is expected to be more severe in NI than in GB and that it will last longer.[x]  In addition, it said that the Northern Ireland agrifood industry is particularly vulnerable because of its reliance on cross-border supply chains.

·        On 5 March 2019, it was reported that manufacturing investment in the UK’s motor industry has slumped by 80% since 2016.[xi]

·         Evidence of the detriment which Brexit is producing prior to divorce emerged from Government plans to protect the shipping of medical supplies in the event of a no deal.[xii]  Not only has the Government had to pay £33m, but it appears that the award of contracts to three companies (one of which had no ferries) dispensed with requirements for competitive tendering.  In Government Audit parlance, this is maladministration.  It inspires little confidence in Government administration of Brexit.  Lord MacPherson of Earls Court, a former Permanent Secretary to the Treasury described the payment as “the latest example of systemic abuse of the taxpayer.”  The botched RHI scheme in N Ireland could be another example of abuse of British taxpayers. 

·         Further recent evidence of a downturn in the national UK economy shows that in May 2019 manufacturing output as measured by the PMI (purchasing managers index) slipped to its lowest level since July 2016.[xiii] Clients in Asia and Europe are reported to be diverting supply chains away from the UK.

·         And on 18 July 2019, the Office of Budgetary Responsibility spelled out the damaging economic impacts of a no-deal Brexit.[xiv]  It forecast that no deal would plunge Britain into recession with 2% shrinkage of the economy, unemployment would exceed 5%, and house prices would fall by 10%.[xv]  As a result instead of the £29bn of borrowing required by leaving with a deal, almost £60bn of borrowing would result from leaving without a deal.

3.    Regional impact – Northern Ireland, recent evidence

·         The CBI report in January 2019 showed that a no-deal Brexit would cost Northern Ireland £5 billion over the next 15 years.[xvi]  In February 2019, Northern Ireland’s largest bank, Danske Bank, expressed grave concerns about the impact of a hard Brexit, warning that no-deal Brexit posed the greatest threat to Northern Ireland’s economy for a generation.[xvii]  

·         And the business consultancy EY warned that Northern Ireland could slide into recession losing 11,400 jobs in 2020 alone as a result of a no-deal Brexit.  EY added that in the event of a trade deal being reached between the UK and EU, growth in the UK as a whole and in NI will still be outpaced by the Republic.  It forecast Ireland’s growth for 2018 at 8.3%, reduced to 3.9% in 2019 and 3.2% in 2020.  Its NI forecast is for economic growth in 2018 of 1.5%, slowing to 0.9% in 2019 and 1.2% in 2020.

·         More recent evidence of Brexit’s adverse impacts both on the regional economy of Northern Ireland and on the national economy has been produced by the National Institute of Economic and Social Research in May 2019.[xviii]  NIESR’s report finds that a soft Brexit with the UK being part of a Customs Union arrangement will shrink Northern Ireland’s economy by 3.3% over a decade; that the UK economy would shrink by 3% per year; a no-deal Brexit would double that impact; and “there will be fewer resources to pay for public services.”[xix]
 
·         In June 2019, a report [xx] commissioned by NI’s Department for the Economy[xxi] from WTO officials provides “sobering” evidence of the detrimental impacts of, among other things, EU tariffs on food exports to Ireland and the ability of small enterprises with no experience in customs procedures to continue to export to Ireland. The report also states[xxii] that border inspection posts would be necessary on the Irish side to meet EU requirements in the event of a no-deal Brexit.

·         The journalist Tony Connolly[xxiii] takes account of authoritative briefings, including the warning in March 2019 from the Head of the NICS of “severe profound and lasting consequences...and no available mitigation against severe consequences of No Deal,” and explains why the NICS commissioned the WTO report.  Thus he articulates the calamitous impacts on NI should the new PM divorce the EU without a deal.

·         On 10 July 2019 the Department for the Economy published a report described by the BBC’s NI’s Economics and Business editor as the most strident warning yet about Brexit.  It says that[xxiv] a no-deal Brexit could put 40,000 jobs at risk in Northern Ireland especially in agri-food and haulage; it warns that exports to Ireland could fall by 11-19% including the danger that most agri-food trade, valued at £832m, would stop; and many businesses will no longer be able to export to Ireland.

Given the DUP’s “Confidence and supply” support for the Conservative Government, much of this empirical evidence listed above has been sent by this correspondent to his DUP MP seeking the evidential basis for that party’s hostility to the EU.[xxv]  A reply is still awaited. 

Do the Conservative Brexiteers, their DUP allies and Labour Brexiteers know more than HM Treasury, the Bank of England, the Office of National Statistics, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research and the Office of Budget Responsibility combined?  And where is their counter evidence?

With the DUP’s consistency in voting against the Withdrawal Agreement, one might speculate whether their overriding priority of defending “the precious union” is reciprocated by UK taxpayers.  A Kings College London opinion poll[xxvi] in April 2019 indicated only one-third of people in Britain hope that NI would vote to remain in the UK.  And a YouGov poll of Conservative Party members in June 2019 shows that 59% would prefer to see Northern Ireland split from the UK if it secured Brexit[xxvii] and 63% prefer to see Scotland independent.

4.    Impacts on Ireland – recent evidence

Little serious account seems to have been given in Great Britain of Brexit’s impact on its neighbours.  In March 2019 a report by the Economic and Social Research Institute quantified the scale of disruption that Brexit will create in Ireland in all cases, deal as well as no deal.[xxviii]  Ten years after Brexit the cost to Ireland’s economy would range from E8 to E15 billion. The report predicted that agriculture and food processing will receive the worst impact.  Given that these industries operate on an all-island basis, the impact on Northern Ireland is self-evident.

One loss for the UK, however, seems to be an advantage for Ireland’s economy.  A report in March 2019 shows the detrimental business impact of Brexit on the UK as hundreds of companies relocate to the EU[xxix], with Dublin “the clear winner.” 

Despite the varying claims from the long list of aspirant leaders of the Conservative party about their plans to resolve the UK/EU border problem – in particular claims that the border can be managed through some kind of new technology, the Government’s own expert (the head of the “UK Border Delivery Group”) informed NI business[xxx] in April 2019 that new technology is not a solution in the short to medium term.


The contradiction between the inviolable pledge that won the Brexit campaign - to take back control of the UK’s borders - and the sacrosanct promises emphasised at Prime Ministerial hustings by Boris Johnson - to keep the UK’s only European land border open - is not lost on the Irish public, north and south of the UK/EU border.




©Michael McSorley 2019


[i] Observer 16 June 2019 “Divided, pessimistic, angry: survey reveals bleak mood of pre-Brexit UK”
[ii] Observer 17 March 2019 Carole Cadwalladr The Cambridge Analytica Files
[iii] Scotland’s Future. Your Guide to an independent Scotland. 648pp. November 2013
[iv] The Independent 6 Dec 2017 https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/david-davis-brexit-impact-assessments-uk-economy-sectors-industry-eu-withdrawal-mps-select-committee-a8094481.html
[v] BBC News 28 November 2018 “EU Exit: Long-term Economic Analysis” https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-46366162
[vi] BBC News 30 January 2019 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-47054439
[vii] BBC News 7 Feb 2019 Bank forecasts worst year for UK since 2009  https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-47155537
[viii] BBC News 11 Feb 2019 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-47196387
[ix] BBC News 26 Feb 2019https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-47379308
[x] BBC News 26 Feb 2019 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-47379948
[xi] BBC News 5 March 2019 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-47457219
[xii] The Times 2 March 2019 p4 “Incompetent Grayling urged to resign over £33m Eurotunnel bill.”
[xiii] Belfast Telegraph 3 June 2019 https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/business/brexit/uk-manufacturing-plunges-into-decline-after-brexit-stockpiling-drive-ends-38174121.html?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=BT:DailyNews&hConversionEventId=AQEAAZQF2gAmdjQwMDAwMDE2Yi0yMjJiLWJkZGYtYzk4ZS0zNjE2M2VhYjRmOTPaACQ2ODY4YTI0Mi0yZDllLTRiMGMtMDAwMC0wMjFlZjNhMGJjZWLaACQ3YzFkZDZlNy04Y2RiLTRiOTktYjM0Yi1hMjVhOWI1NDJlNjchxLT37SjyxJ8Ilypo9iqlk_gBuU6OWKlR00ufVdBChQ
[xiv] BBC News 18 July 2019 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-49027889
[xv] Observer Toby Helm 21 July 2019 pp 6-7
[xvi] Irish Times  22 January 2019 https://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/no-deal-brexit-could-cost-northern-ireland-5-7bn-over-15-years-1.3765874
[xvii] Belfast Telegraph 1 Feb 2019 https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/northern-ireland/bank-warns-nodeal-brexit-biggest-risk-to-northern-ireland-economy-for-generation-37773679.html
[xviii] Belfast Telegraph 10 May 2019 https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/northern-ireland/customs-union-to-cost-ni-900-a-year-for-every-person-report-38096786.html
[xix] NIESR 8 May 2019 “The Economic Impact on the United Kingdom of a customs union deal with the European Union.”
[xx] WTO report June 2019 The Irish Land Border: Existing and Potential Customs Facilitations in a No-Deal Scenario, drawn up by Eric Pickett, a German lawyer specialising in EU customs and WTO law, and Michael Lux, head of unit in the European Commission’s customs division for 25 years
[xxi] Belfast Telegraph  12 June 2019 Mark Bain  https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/brexit/sobering-brexit-report-lays-bare-perils-for-northern-ireland-firms-of-nodeal-38210851.html
[xxii] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-48602075
[xxiii] RTE News 14 June 2019 https://www.rte.ie/news/analysis-and-comment/2019/0614/1055418-double-whammy-a-no-deal-brexit-and-northern-ireland/
[xxiv] BBC NI news 10 July 2019 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-48934706
[xxv] https://michaelmcsorleyeconomy.blogspot.com/2019/03/brexit-briefings-to-dup-mp-jan-feb-2019.html
[xxvi] Belfast Telegraph 3 April 2019 https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/brexit/survey-only-third-of-britons-want-northern-ireland-to-stay-in-uk-brexit-pressure-on-union-37979514.html?sfns=mo
[xxvii] Belfast Telegraph 18 June 2019 https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/brexit/poll-most-tory-members-would-sacrifice-northern-ireland-for-brexit-38229896.html
[xxviii] RTÉ News 26 March 2019 https://www.rte.ie/news/ireland/2019/0326/1038584-esri-brexit/
[xxix] Irish Times 11 March 2011 “The Brexodus: Dublin attracting big business from the City of London” https://www.irishtimes.com/business/financial-services/the-brexodus-dublin-attracting-big-business-from-the-city-of-london-1.3821678
[xxx] Belfast Telegraph 17 April 2019 https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/business/uk-world/technology-cant-prevent-hard-border-in-ireland-if-brexit-means-customs-controls-firms-told-38021795.html?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=BT:DailyNews&hConversionEventId=AQEAAZQF2gAmdjQwMDAwMDE2YS0yYWY5LTFkNmItYTczYi0yZTE2M2U4MDgxYTXaACQxZmU0NTFlNi03ZmY0LTQ4MDYtMDAwMC0wMjFlZjNhMGJjZTXaACRjNjc5YmNkYS0yZDg1LTQ2NDEtYWMyYi0zZTMwMzUyMDQwYjgQ_ts5GBbPTnh8ZaYVs9RLfCQfX22d8FbG4seQEPGhVw