The
unfolding events are very difficult to read, and any reading is likely to be
out of date even before it is written. This post is about where I think we are
currently. [Before starting, it may be useful to clarify key terms, since their
meaning is shifting. By soft Brexit I mean remaining in the single market and
customs union. By hard Brexit I mean leaving both of these and seeking a free
trade agreement with the EU. By ultra Brexit I mean leaving the EU with no
trade agreement and possibly no agreements on anything].
The failure
of the Tory party to win the election clearly places their hard Brexit plan in
jeopardy in that it was not endorsed by the electorate. The consequence has
been to open the debate that Theresa May refused to have after the Referendum
about what sort of Brexit that vote meant, itself a consequence of the abject
failure of the Leave campaign to specify what form of Brexit those who voted to
leave were voting for. That latter point is crucial, because it means that the ‘will
of the people’ argument (flawed as it is in general) is irrelevant to the
question of how Brexit should be enacted.
What this
now means is that the Tory civil war on the EU which has ripped it apart since
the Maastricht rebellions of the early 1990s, and which the referendum was
supposed to solve, is now raging again. In fact, it never stopped: but in the
months after May’s anointment it was stifled by her embrace of hard Brexit. It
is worth constantly reminding ourselves what a massive price the UK’s economy,
cultural cohesion and geo-political standing is being forced to pay for this
internal party factionalism, driven by perhaps no more than 70 Tory MPs.
As to how
the current battle in that war is going, it’s difficult to say. There are many
signs of an emerging soft Brexit ascendancy: the appointments of Gavin Barwell
as May’s Chief of Staff and Damian Green as de
facto deputy Prime Minister being prime examples of this, since both are
(or at least were) strongly for remain. The newly elected group of Scottish
Tory MPs and the Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson would also seem to be
pushing the government in a soft Brexit direction.
The need for
DUP support, likely to be predicated upon a ‘soft border’, is being reported to
imply staying in the customs union (and, if so, that means no independent trade
deals, a major plank of the hard and ultra Brexit positions). But I think that
in reality a soft border is only possible if the UK is also in the single
market. Consider: if there is free movement of people into the Republic of Ireland
from the rest of the EU, but no free movement into Northern Ireland as part of
the UK, then how can passport controls at the border be avoided? What else
would stop a Bulgarian, say, entering the Republic with no restriction and then
entering the UK? It is no good talking about the Common Travel Area as a model here: it derives from a situation which
pre-dates the existence of the single market.
All this,
plus renewed and intense business lobbying to stay in the single market and
customs union, pushes the Tories to soft Brexit. But other signs point in the
opposite direction. Michael Gove’s appointment to DEFRA is one; and it will be
interesting to see how he squares his new role with promises to farmers during
the leave campaign that Brexit would not affect their subsidies. More
specifically, Brexit Secretary David Davis has indicated in a series of interviews
today that hard Brexit is non-negotiable. That may well shift, but if it does
then nothing will be resolved as it would almost certainly lead to a leadership
challenge from the monomaniac, dogmatic Tory hard Brexiters and, if that
challenge was successful, almost certainly a second election.
So the
Tories are in a horrible mess. Labour are in an equally confused state,
although being out of government it presents less pressing problems. Their
absurd manifesto position of wanting the benefits of the single market and
customs union but without membership of either and excluding freedom of
movement may have helped them to secure the votes of both remainers and
ex-UKIPpers, but as a serious policy position it is meaningless. The official
position of seeking ‘tariff free access’ to the single market shows a pitiful
ignorance of the (inter-related) issues of single market membership (cf. ‘access’)
and non-tariffs (cf. ‘tariffs’). It doesn’t even make sense in terms of their
other stated position of wanting any Brexit deal to deliver exactly the same
benefits as EU membership. Meanwhile other influential voices within the Labour
Party are speaking of single market membership as their preferred option. They
need to agree on that, and very quickly, if hard Brexit is to be avoided.
A curious
and very unfortunate consequences of the splits within each party is that they
produced manifestos which were similar with respect to Brexit. This allows the
ludicrous claim currently being made by Brexiters that, although neither party
won, there is a consensus view amongst the electorate in favour of hard Brexit.
The reality is almost certainly the exact opposite: if there is still a
majority in the country for Brexit at all, it is for soft Brexit and the same
is true amongst MPs.
Underneath
all the complexities and uncertainties it’s that last thing we should hold on
to. If we must use the dire phrase ‘the will of the people’ then it is not –
either in terms of direct or representative democracy – a will for hard Brexit,
and may not even any more be for any Brexit. It is now vital that our political
institutions align with that.
The window
to do so is very small indeed. Because of May’s grotesque irresponsibility in
triggering Article 50 before embarking on the election, Britain has now used up
almost 3 months of the 24 month A50 period – that’s one day out of eight -and
in that time has not just done nothing to progress negotiations but has plunged
itself into a new debate about what those negotiations are even about. In the
meantime, businesses are relocating, investments are on hold or going
elsewhere, staffing of public services is falling apart, the economy is on a
knife edge, and the lives of millions (both in the UK and the EU) are in a turmoil
of uncertainty.
Some of that
damage will never be undone, including that to the UK’s reputation, but it
could at least be staunched by a rapid commitment to soft Brexit. It’s
extraordinary that an obvious solution to most of the Brexit problems facing
the UK is still, even after this election, no more than a possibility. That
election has given the UK a final chance but it is time-limited. Unless some way
can be conjured up to pause the A50 process then we have perhaps a couple of
weeks left to avoid disaster.
Update
(14 June 2017): The
situation described above persists and has, if anything, intensified. Thus on
the one hand we have reports
that Philip Hammond is seeking to soften the previous Brexit plans at least
to the extent of seeking to remain in the customs union; whilst on the other
hand one
of the hardest of Brexiters, Steve Baker, who leads the ERG Group, has been
appointed as minister in the DExEU (amidst reports
of chaos within that department). May has also appointed several ‘soft
Brexiters’ to various positions, and yet maintains that the White Paper hard
Brexit remains the plan. It may be that there is Machiavellian intent in all
this, but if so it is hard to decipher and it seems more likely she is simply
so weakened that she has to try to keep everyone ‘on board’ for now. It is hard
to see how that can survive contact with the reality of the opening of
negotiations, which she insists will go ahead as planned. Meanwhile, different
people within Labour Party continue to indicate different positions on the
single market and customs union. There is now a palpable sense of political
crisis, ironically pointed up by the pomp and ceremony of yesterday’s opening
of parliament which seem a brittle and hollow shell around chaos rather than a
signifier of traditional certainties and continuities.
Many people
are calling
for a cross-party group to take Brexit forward but it is hard to see how
this can make a difference, since the parties themselves do not have agreed
positions. There is a strong argument to say that other parties should stay
well clear: this is the (predominantly) Tory Brexiters’ mess and they should
own it. Conversely, a cross-party group would inevitably led Brexiters to
complain, as the disaster unfolds, that this disaster was due to the other
parties rather than to the wholly unworkable policy of Brexit. The way out
might end up being some kind of cross-party arrangement but, if so, it should
be one which reflects the majority view amongst – it can reasonably be assumed –
both MPs and the public that Brexit should be completely abandoned. That would
of course entail massive political fallout, but there is no scenario anymore
which does not entail that.
So we remain
in an unholy mess: a statement which I suspect will not need updating for some
years to come.
Update
(16 June 2017): The
basic situation on ‘soft versus hard’ remains unchanged, so I am not writing a
new post. Philip Hammond did not give his Mansion House speech on a softer
Brexit, citing the dreadful London tower fire as the reason for cancellation.
However, it seem hard to resist connecting the cancellation to the report,
shortly before the cancellation, that the
DUP support May’s rather than Hammond’s versions (I cannot bring myself to
call them visions) of Brexit. At the same time, it seems difficult to reconcile
the DUP’s reported position with their apparent desire to avoid a hard border,
and there continues to be a strong head of steam within the Tory Party against
hard Brexit Labour’s position remains opaque, despite an article suggesting a
possible (but unspecified) change of course in an
article by Keir Starmer today.
Nevertheless,
the government intends to proceed with opening negotiations with the EU on
Monday on the basis of the White Paper hard Brexit position. It is difficult to
overstate the absurdity, and indeed gross irresponsibility of this: there is
currently no government in place, and no agreement as to what the government’s
position will turn out to be. For a fantastic analysis of this situation, which
I will not try to better, see Ian
Dunt’s piece Brexit talks start on Monday
and we have no idea what we are doing.
[For ongoing links to a wide variety of news items and
analyses of Brexit, please follow me on twitter. I tweet exclusively on Brexit
with the focus on reputable sources and well-informed commentators, but avoid
(with occasional lapses) extensive debate as the issues involved are usually
too complex for tweets. Nor do I seek to persuade the unpersuadable – the aim
is imply to provide high quality information for those who may be interested in
it. Twitter ID: @chrisgreybrexit].
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