Brexiters
are often accused of living in the past. That is manifest in the now recurring
Brexiter response to concerns about Brexit: ‘but we did perfectly well before’.
It is made
to farmers worrying about who will pick their crops and the NHS worrying about
who will staff the wards, if not EU workers. To which there is an obvious
answer: before Britain joined the EU forty years ago, the age demographic of
Britain was completely different.
It is made
to those querying how Britain will make trade deals. To which there is an
obvious answer; before Britain joined the EU forty years ago the world was not
divided into regional trade blocs, membership of one of which is now vital and
of which only the EU is available to Britain.
It is made
to those pointing out that leaving the customs union will wreak havoc on
international supply chains. To which there is an obvious answer; before
Britain joined the EU forty years ago such international supply chains scarcely
existed.
It is made
to those warning of the dangers of a Northern Ireland hard border (when
Brexiters retort that the Common Travel Area (CTA) long precedes the EU). To
which there is an obvious answer; the Republic of Ireland is in the single
market with freedom of movement, so the CTA cannot exist without freedom of
movement into the UK.
In all
these, and other, ways Brexiters are indeed living in the past. But the more
salient criticism is that they have forgotten
the past, and exhibit a curious – and now dangerous – historical amnesia. The
first aspect of this is that they have forgotten that far from being forced to
join the EU Britain had to virtually beg to do so, having tried to do so since
the late 1950s and having been rebuffed – primarily by France – in 1963. If we
must go back in time to the early 1970s then we should remember that we were
the supplicants. Brexiters have also forgotten that when membership was
confirmed in the 1975 Referendum it was explicitly framed as both a political
and economic union; it has been a pervasive Brexiter myth that no political
union was envisaged.
In the forty
years since then, the EU has changed significantly, but in ways which have been
shaped overwhelmingly by Britain. The development of a wider and deeper single
market, increasingly taking in services, did not just enhance European
integration but did so in a particular, market-focussed, way in line with
Thatcherism – Thatcher being a prime architect of the single market – and later
Blairism. That deepening single market always implied a deepening of political
integration, so it is nonsense to suggest that this happened against British
wishes, because a transnational single market entails transnational regulation
and law. It’s no coincidence that in 1995 the French rejected the European
constitution in a Referendum: it reflected hostility to the British model of a
European market. Still, single market deepening went ahead and that was
indicative of British influence over what the EU has become.
British influence
over the EU was not just economic. The fall of the Berlin Wall and the
liberation of the former Warsaw Pact countries in Eastern Europe presented the
strategic possibility of integrating them into the west and the strategic
danger that if that did not happen they would become unstable or even hostile.
One of the great achievements of the EU has been to integrate them, and to
avoid those dangers, and Britain more than any other EU member state was the
prime mover of this. Entailed within that integration was the accession states
joining the single market and their citizens enjoying free movement rights, as
duly happened. But it was the choice of the British government to allow those
free movement rights to apply immediately to Britain (unlike most EU states)
just as it was the choice of the British government never to utilise the
various restrictions on free movement of people within the EU that EU law has
always allowed.
Thus by the
time that EU membership became a defining issue in British politics in
2015-2016 the situation was that Britain, having had to beg to join in the early
1970s, had, rather remarkably, managed to shape the EU in accordance with its
economic and political priorities. Moreover, Britain had managed to gain
exemption from a host of EU developments – most obviously the single currency
and the Schengen area, but also things like refugee sharing – that either did
not suit its strategic interests or which would be unpopular with the British
electorate. In addition, the budget rebate deal meant that Britain’s
contribution was each and every year the lowest as a percentage of GDP of any
member state.
By these
means Britain had managed to shape for itself a global role by virtue of its
unique, interlocking combination of membership of the EU, UN Permanent Security
Council, NATO, Commonwealth, Five Eyes intelligence sharing and the nuclear
club, not inconsiderably underpinned by the City of London’s place as one of
the top two centres of international finance. In every discussion – from
climate change to human rights – Britain’s voice mattered. It would be quite wrong
to say that we had no problems but, still, Britain had substantially
re-invented itself compared with its early 1970s malaise.
Now, all
that has been squandered by the Brexiters who have forgotten all that has been
achieved by EU membership and are replacing it with fantasies. No longer will
Britain shape the continent it is part of. No longer will Britain be the pivot
between every international body. No longer will it be the centre of global
science and innovation that it has been. Many disagree with our nuclear weapons
policy, but it will most likely be ended for reasons of cost, not principle,
and with it is likely to go our place on the UN Permanent Security Council. And
as we hawk ourselves around for trade deals, there will be no question of human
rights or environmental standards: any deal will do. The City of London will
decline – and if you don’t care about bankers, you’ll miss their taxes – and is
already doing so.
Maybe the
key point to make in the present situation is that there is literally no deal
with the EU that will be a good deal compared with what we had before. The
options now range from ‘not too bad’ (meaning, let’s be clear, an economic
recession) to ‘catastrophic’ (meaning an economic depression). That’s the
range of possible economic outcomes, and just how bad they are will be determined by
negotiation. The geo-political outcome is much easier to
predict because it doesn’t depend upon the negotiations with the EU, it will
occur and already is occurring simply by virtue of leaving. There are no
conceivable circumstances whatsoever in which Brexit can mean anything other
than a diminution of Britain’s geo-political standing.
It is extraordinary, therefore, that so many
Brexiters consider themselves to be patriots. Were they, indeed, patriots they
would not be so recklessly squandering what has been achieved in the last four
decades, having apparently forgotten it just as they have forgotten all that
has changed. Which is why Theresa May's bogus assertions that those who are not behind Brexit are in some way betraying Britain. On the contrary, the betrayal is pursuing a course of action which will inevitably diminish us.
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