The novelist
and political commentator John Lanchester has written an incisive analysis of
the referendum result, the reasons behind it and its possible aftermath in his essay ‘Brexit
Blues’ in the London Review of Books.
I don't agree with all that he says, but it is well worth a read. Part of what he discusses is the way that the leave
vote was an expression (albeit highly manipulated) of the discontent of those
in the white working class outside London who had lost out from or been left
behind by globalization and recent UK politics. A very similar discussion was presciently provided
just a couple of days after the vote in counter-consultant Martin
Vogel’s elegant essay.
That has
become a familiar analysis – albeit that Lanchester and Vogel express it with
considerable subtlety and alongside many other, less familiar, points. It is
somewhat borne out by the fascinating
polling data from Lord Ashcroft, which show the social class demographic of
the vote (36% of social classes C2DE for remain; 57% of social classes AB). But
that also shows that there were plenty of people in each class group who voted
differently to their group’s trend. The data also show that age and whether in
employment or not were strongly correlated with voting patterns (by contrast,
gender was not a factor). More revealing is the way that voting leave
associates with negative attitudes to multi-culturalism, feminism, environmentalism
and social liberalism (and the converse for remain voters). This suggests that cosmopolitanism
versus localism, rather than simply social class, is the key axis here.
Labour
leader Jeremy Corbyn (who was a lukewarm campaigner for remain, and is widely
believed to be pro-Brexit, albeit on different grounds to most leavers) this
week said that the leave vote was “a decisive rejection of the economic
status quo”, meaning neo-liberal capitalism, and that “it can no longer
credibly be argued, for the majority of people, that free trade and free
markets alone will deliver increased prosperity”. It’s not entirely clear from
the Ashcroft data that this is so, because although voting leave associated
with the view that globalization was a force for ill, leave voters (and remain
voters) were split about 50-50 on whether capitalism was a force for ill or for
good.
The more important
point is that, whatever those voting leave may think, those who lead them and,
in particular, the Brexiters now in government positions and responsible for
negotiating Brexit do not think Brexit means anything even remotely like what Corbyn
thinks it means. Instead, they are advocates of more globalization, more
free trade, and more free markets. So
even if Labour under Corbyn were to win the next election – which current polls suggest is highly
unlikely – by then the shape of post-Brexit Britain is likely to have been
settled in ways quite different to those favoured by Corbyn.
Leaving
aside whether it could even be negotiated with the EU, it is in any case
unlikely that Corbyn’s preference – which seems to be membership of the free
market but without the restrictions he believes (debatably) this imposes on
nationalization and competition policy – would resonate with those leavers for
whom immigration/ free movement of people is the main issue. In fact, Corbyn
would do well to reflect on the differences between his own and Lanchester’s and Vogel's
much more nuanced analyses of what the Brexit vote meant. Or, to put it another
way, if the key axis is cosmopolitans versus locals, then Corbyn’s socialist
internationalism is a version of cosmopolitanism whereas Labour leavers were
animated by localism.
It still
remains completely unclear what the eventual settlement will be (nothing
decisive has happened in that respect since my previous post unless you count
the bathetic
call from Boris Johnson to refurbish the Royal Yacht to serve as a floating
embassy for global free trade deals). Lanchester (writing at the end of July)
thinks it likely that it will be a Norway type free market membership
arrangement which will bypass the concerns of many leavers, but will reflect
the view of the remainers plus enough of the leavers to be democratically
defensible.
I would
probably have said the same thing at the end of July. Now, I am not so sure.
There is, however, one statistic in the Ashcroft polling which is especially
interesting in terms of how things may now play out. During the campaign, it
was generally held that leavers were far more passionate about leaving than
were remainers about remaining. But the
Ashcroft polling shows that “more than three
quarters (77%) of those who voted to remain thought “the decision we make in
the referendum could have disastrous consequences for us as a country if we get
it wrong”. More than two thirds (69%) of leavers, by contrast, thought the
decision “might make us a bit better or worse off as a country, but there
probably isn’t much in it either way”.
This may suggest that remainers will be much more implacable in opposing
Brexit (or at least trying to mitigate its worst effects) than leavers will be
in insisting on it (or at least in any particular form). It certainly
seems to be the case that remainers are not willing just to sit down under the
narrow result, as the continuing popularity of The New European paper, as well as well as the numerous
grass roots and parliamentary ‘post-remain’ groups, shows. And there are surely
powerful allies in the civil service, business and the City. Nigel Farage, in
his farewell speech to the UKIP conference today said that they had won the
battle but must now win the peace – by which he meant hard Brexit. The job of
remainers is to prevent that, and not just for themselves but precisely for the
jobs and well-being of those who vote leave on a flawed prospectus. For even if Lanchester and Vogel are right about the motives of at least some of the leavers, the fact is that leaving the EU - especially in the hard Brexit variant - will not address their problems, it will massively exacerbate them.
No comments:
Post a Comment