A short post
on Theresa May’s visit to Japan.
During the
visit, May said that Britain was leaving the single market because it was not
possible to be in it without being in the EU. This is patently untrue, and
anyone with the most basic factual knowledge knows it to be untrue. May is
either does not have that basic knowledge or she is lying.
May thinks
that the EU-Japan deal can be the basis for a UK-Japan deal. It obviously cannot be because
the EU and the UK are completely different economies. No sensible trade negotiator
would cut and paste terms. Moreover, there is no
way that Japan or anyone else will consider any deal until the terms of UK-EU
trade are known. Japan’s openly stated preference is for the UK to stay in the
single market.
There’s
really not much point in saying more. This visit is indicative of the almost
grotesque stupidity and delusion of Brexit, something underscored by its being
reported in the rabidly pro-Brexit Daily
Express as showing a Japanese
preference to do a deal with Britain ahead of one with the EU. Again, that’s
patently untrue.
There have
always been delusional politicians and dishonest journalism. But this Japanese
visit of May’s shows, in microcosm, how Britain is now fully in the grip of
delusion and dishonesty. It makes May look stupid and it makes Britain look
stupid.
The slew of government
Brexit papers has continued this week, with much accompanying comment. I have
the sense that, in very general terms, the quality of comment and debate about
Brexit is improving compared with that during the Referendum. Admittedly, that
is a fairly low base to judge by and in any case it is ridiculous that we are
only now – perhaps since the election - beginning to have anything like the
kind of national conversation that should have happened before and immediately after
the vote. When, during the campaign, was there any detailed discussion of what
leaving would mean in terms of, for example, data protection, customs or
dispute resolution?
Even now, it
is shameful that the government are keeping secret the some fifty Brexit impact
assessments they have made. As Molly
Scott Cato asks, writing on politics.co.uk, what is the government scared
of us knowing? Not, I think it’s fair to assume, that the assessments show that
the impact is going to be positive.
With all of
this activity it is hard to keep abreast of developments, although the Institute
for Government has provided a short, useful primer and there are many good
discussions of the new position papers available – for example Peter
Holmes on the continuity of goods paper on the UK Trade Policy Observatory
site and Ian
Dunt on the dispute resolution (‘ECJ’) paper, again on politics.co.uk.
These, the paper on data protection, and last week’s papers on customs and on
the Irish border (which
I discussed here) are, taken together, beginning to indicate where
government thinking now lies.
I put it
that way, because it’s hard to escape the impression that this is still an internally-focussed
exercise, concerned more with creating some consensus within the government,
the Tory Party and perhaps the British media than with the EU negotiations per se. As Peter
Foster in the Daily Telegraph (£)
argues, the position papers do not really set out much in the way of
concrete positions as opposed to
vague ambitions.
That is my
sense, too. It’s almost as if the UK is saying ‘this is what we want’ and
expecting the EU to say ‘this is how we will deliver it for you’. If so, that’s
unrealistic and also – especially given Brexiters’ trumpeting of sovereignty –
slightly demeaning, and as Steve Peers has
argued on a twitter thread today there is a more general lack of realism on
display in the way David Davis, in particular, is approaching the negotiations.
The dispute
resolution paper was perhaps the most important, and most widely discussed,
because it seems to mark some retreat from May’s reckless ECJ ‘red line’ by
implicitly accepting some kind of continuing role for the ECJ if only
indirectly (albeit that this was also implicit
in the White Paper), and even seems to imply that use of the EFTA court
might be acceptable to the UK. If that is the case, it removes one significant
barrier to the UK remaining
in the single market. At all events the paper could be read as a slight
softening of Brexit or at least as a slightly more pragmatic approach.
The most
interesting thing to me, therefore, has been to see that criticism from the
ultras in the Tory party has been very muted and in
some cases absent. Either they don’t understand the implications of the
paper (which wouldn’t be a great surprise) or they have been brought on board
with this new, if still limited, pragmatism. If so, that is a very striking
development.
The
overriding message of the papers, including that on dispute resolution, is that
there is an attempt, driven perhaps by the civil service, to keep as much as
possible of existing arrangements in place. This also betokens pragmatism (as
well as prompting the obvious question: so why leave?). But it is difficult to
determine whether this is indeed the beginning of a move to a softer Brexit
(what is called a crème brûlée Brexit in Jon Worth’s amusing list of
some twenty (!) variants of Brexit, i.e. hard on the outside but soft on
the inside) or whether it is a re-hash of a ‘have cake and eat it’ Brexit.
Time will
tell. But time is what we don’t have. It really cannot be said often enough how
crazily irresponsible the government have been in triggering Article 50 before doing
even the relatively limited preparatory work shown in the position papers, much
later and in much less detail than the EU (again, we shouldn’t forget this; the
UK began the negotiations with no position papers at all). And of course then
promptly calling an election, stalling the process. So we are now five months
into the Article 50 period with – in effect – only thirteen months of negotiation
time to go. And time is running out in another sense, with almost daily reports
of economic (and
human) damage, for
example to investment, and with sterling
now nearing Euro parity. As ever, for a good, up to date, round up of the mounting
damage, see the Brexit Record site.
There is,
however, a much more malign interpretation of what is happening. It’s that by
presenting these rather vague position papers – and yet still not saying
anything much that is useful on Citizens’ Rights or anything
at all about the ‘exit bill’ – that the stage is being set for the Brexit
government to say that they have tried to reach an amicable solution with the
EU who have spurned our advances so there is no choice but to walk out with no
deal. That might be the implication of the
report in today’s Sun of
government sources saying that they have proposed reasonable solutions but
these have been ‘thrown back in our faces’.
As with so
much else, it’s impossible to know if this is just posturing for the pro-Brexit
press and public or serious stuff. If so, then we’re in line for a ‘kamikaze’
Brexit. I find it difficult to believe that any government would entertain so
damaging a policy, and it would encounter major parliamentary opposition. But it would certainly explain the
ultra-Brexiters’ acceptance of the breaching of the ECJ red line.
So having
begun this post by saying that there are signs of improved comment and debate
about Brexit we are, even so, still in the absurd situation of not knowing what
the government are really trying to do. Or, indeed, whether they really know,
themselves.
Having won
the Referendum, Brexiters seem surprisingly unhappy and, on social media
especially, as angry as ever. Whilst remainers look on aghast as the government
pursues hard Brexit, some Brexiters are talking of betrayal. Nigel Farage did
so as
early as November 2016, and continues to
do so now and it’s a sentiment shared by many leave voters according
to a recent Reuters report.
For some, at
least, of those voters their disappointment will arise from the lies and
half-truths told by the Leave campaign. The campaign leaders repeatedly claimed
that leaving the EU would be a quick and easy matter, whatever some of them now
say to the contrary. That Brexit turns out to be long, complex and painful may
make ordinary leave voters feel betrayed by the government; in fact they have
been betrayed by the Brexiters.
However, for
the Brexiters themselves something different is going on. The key to understanding
these ideologues is that whatever concession is made to them they will demand
another. This has been evident in the Tory party for some years. Most recently,
as soon as Cameron offered them a Referendum they started agitating about the
wording of the question and the framing of the response (specifically, they did
not want it to be ‘yes’ or ‘no’ with ‘yes’ being ‘remain’) and the franchise
(they did not want 16/17 year olds or long-term expatriates to have a vote).
They got
their way on all these things, but there were bigger issues at stake. Until
fairly recently (although not, it is true, during the Referendum campaign itself)
Farage and UKIP were quite happy with a Norway-style Brexit (i.e. remaining in
the single market). And during the Referendum campaign itself many in Vote
Leave said that this was exactly what Brexit would mean. High profile examples
included Owen Paterson MP and Daniel Hannan MEP. Thus Hannan (who, by the way,
has blocked me on Twitter where I reminded him of this) said: “Absolutely
nobody is talking about threatening our place in the single market”. These
things, for all that they are denied by Brexiters now, are a matter of public
record. See here and here and here.
But as soon
as they had won the Referendum this was not enough. Brexit, they
now insisted (£), had to mean hard Brexit – primarily leaving the single
market but also any form of ECJ jurisdiction, and negotiating a Free Trade
Agreement (FTA) with the EU. When Theresa May became PM she could have used the
opportunity to initiate a national, public conversation about what form Brexit
should take. Instead, during those long months of ‘Brexit means Brexit’ what
happened was a private, internal conversation in the Tory Party from which emerged
the Lancaster House speech in January declaring without any comparative analysis
of the different options that Brexit meant hard Brexit.
That, as we
are seeing, is proving a much more complex matter than the Brexiters asserted because
of the scale of what is involved – not just regarding trade – and the time
frames available, about which I written about endlessly on this blog. But now
the Brexiters are not satisfied with hard Brexit anyway. Just as before, having
had concessions made to them (with that on the single market the hugest of all)
they are coming back for more. Thus, just today, the Institute
for Economic Affairs make the case of leaving with no deal at all. And
whilst this is well into the terrain of madness, in the wilder fringes of
Brexiter-land it is a very moderate position. UKIP at the last election, for
example, were advocating pulling out of the Article 50 negotiations altogether.
So trying to
give Brexiters what they want in order to appease them proves to be pointless:
whatever they are given they come back, like blackmailers or protection
racketeers, with even more extortionate demands. But there is more to it than
that. There is a strain amongst the Brexit ultras which actually does not want
to get its way but which wants to feel victimised. The victim narrative in
which an unholy alliance of big corporations, pointy-headed experts and
limp-wristed liberals, the amorphous and hydra-headed ‘elite’, were ganging up on 'ordinary people' ran throughout
the Referendum campaign and its aftermath. Never mind that Leave was bankrolled
by millionaires and fronted by public school and Oxbridge career politicians.
And this is
the reason why the Brexiters are not happy in victory and why they keep asking
for more. Winning and having their demands met strips them of the victim status
they wallow in. So their moment of triumph in the Referendum was also the
moment of their defeat, and the reason they so assiduously seek out signs of
betrayal is that betrayal is what would most readily allow a return to the
comfort zone of victimhood. For the same reason, the narrative of being 'punished' by the EU is actually appealing to them. Likewise, only by constantly asking for more can
they hope to reach the point where they are told they can have no more and, in
that moment, again feel the masochistic thrill of being aggrieved.
The tragedy
for those of us who do not share this peculiar political pathology is that we
are dragged further and further away from any remotely pragmatic policy. The
reason why the government is currently in such a mess over Brexit is that it is
trying to do the impossible: satisfy the demands of Brexiters without
completely wrecking the economy. But without wrecking the economy the ever more
extreme demands of the Brexiters can’t be met. Theresa May had the chance to
draw a line in the sand last year but she ducked it, choosing instead to draw
red lines with the EU, and she no longer has the authority to do so. So now we
are stuck, an entire nation shackled to the whims of a relatively small number
of people who – like rebellious teenagers secretly wanting to be set boundaries
- demand total victory whilst craving defeat.
The
publication this week of government position papers on customs and on the Irish
border has been widely reported and discussed (see, for example, here and here).
Stepping back a little from that discussion, four things stand out. The
first is just how complex and interlocked different aspects of Brexit are. The
single market, customs union, customs cooperation, commercial policy, freedom
of movement, open borders (both Schengen and the UK-Ireland Common Travel Area)
- amongst many other things - are all conceptually and in some cases
institutionally distinct. But they interact with each other in a myriad of ways
and they developed via a variety of routes over different timescales and
through an assortment of legal instruments. Thus Brexit is not a single event
but a multiplicity of interlocking processes.
In that
respect, the sequencing (exit terms first, then future terms) required by the
EU is problematic, even though it was clear from before the Referendum that
this would be the approach, so Brexiters have nothing to complain about. The
reason the UK published its customs paper first and then the Irish border paper
seems to have been an attempt to get the EU to recognize that it makes little
sense to regard the Irish border as being within the exit terms to be settled
before the customs issue is discussed as part of the future terms. The two are
so intimately interlinked that this is not really possible. That is about the
only point where I have some sympathy with how the government are approaching
the negotiations.
However,
whilst interlinked, some aspects are a matter of how Brexit is interpreted.
Thus, as has been widely pointed out, it is a matter of interpretation that it
means leaving the single market. On the other hand, although much less widely
pointed out, it is not a matter of interpretation but inevitability that Brexit
means leaving the customs union albeit that we could seek some kind of customs
treaty with the EU (as Turkey does, although the
form of that agreement would be highly disadvantageous to the UK). It bears
saying that the Leave campaign and Michael Gove in particular claimed that, on
Brexit, Britain would be part of a “free trade zone that
spreads from Iceland to Turkey”. That was a highly
misleading formulation, but its only conceivable meaning was that Britain
would be in the single market (like Iceland) and would have a customs treaty (like
Turkey).
The second
thing that stands out is that (partly as a result of this complexity and the
very tight timescales resulting both from the Article 50 period and the
domestic pressure from Brexiters in the UK for a quick resolution) the government
are really engaged in nothing more than a damage limitation exercise. For
whilst the Brexiters claimed before the Referendum, and the ultras continue to
claim, that there is no possibility of damage from Brexit the stakes are very
high indeed. If things go wrong, then Britain will effectively cease to be a
functioning economy with the possibility of major social breakdown. Thus the
government plans on the customs union and the Irish border are in no way like
normal government policies which at least claim to be trying to make some
aspect of life better. Instead all that is being attempted is to recreate all,
or as much as possible, of the status quo so as to avoid the terrible consequences
of it falling apart; and through transitional arrangements to buy time to
undertake this recreation of the status quo.
Thus there
is no sense that all that the highly
complex and expensive new customs arrangements (even if they prove
workable, which many doubt, not least as the details are vague and much relies
upon wild claims of untested technological fixes) will actually improve
anything for anyone. In fact it is openly admitted that they will entail
additional bureaucratic costs for businesses (the idea that Brexit means less ‘red
tape’ seems to have gone to heaven along with the £350M a week). The only
exception is the idea that because exiting the customs union will also enable
exiting the commercial policy (these are separate but, again, interrelated things)
Britain can make its own trade deals. That is touted as if it were some great
prize, but no serious person thinks that these trade deals can compensate for
the cumulative costs of Brexit including, but not limited to, lost trade. So
there is no economic benefit in this, just the psychological or theological one
that it somehow gives Britain ‘more control’ or ‘sovereignty’. For Brexiters
that is apparently both meaningful and desirable in its own right, whatever the
cost, but they should at least admit that rather than pretending that there is
an economic rationale for it by implying it will unlock new vistas of
international trade.
The third
thing, of course, is that all of this remains an almost wholly UK focussed
discussion. And it remains ‘cakeist’ in the sense of trying to retain all those
aspects of EU membership which are seen as desirable by Brexiters whilst
avoiding all those they dislike. As such it is unclear – and
also unlikely – that the EU will go along with any of the ideas in the
position papers. For the Brexiters this is a matter of EU malice or punishment –
proving that the EU are not a nice lot, and in itself justifying Brexit. That
is childish. It is Britain’s choice to leave the EU – and to do so in the form
it is doing – and that
has consequences. International relations, whether with the EU or anyone
else, are a matter of realpolitik, pragmatism and power. Brexit means that
Britain is choosing to change its relationship with the EU from member to third
party country. This is really so obvious it need hardly be said. If Brexiters
don’t like the consequences of that, tough. They
own them.
To
understand what becoming a third party country means, Brexiters should
undertake the thought experiment of imagining that it was not Britain leaving
the EU but another country – Greece, say, or perhaps more appositely Ireland.
Would Brexiters then be willing to make all kinds of accommodations – including
incurring financial (say, new customs facilities) and political (say, Irish
peace process) costs? I think not. They would be saying to that country: the
problems created are your problems, not ours, and the only things we will do
are those things that protect our interests, not yours. Would that be malice or
punishment? Only in some kind of boy scout view of international relations.
Even the
realpolitik of negotiating with the EU would not be so difficult were it not
for the relentless pressure of the vociferous and ever-present Brexit ultras
inside and outside the Tory party. They are so detached from reality and so
implacable in their demands that even the government’s attempts to negotiate
hard Brexit are regarded as a betrayal. Since they do not have to take any responsibility
at all for the consequences they are free to oppose transitional periods, exit
bills, or any kind of deal at all (see John
Redwood here, for example). If May thought that she had bought their
loyalty by rejecting the obvious, pragmatic, compromise of soft (single market)
Brexit then she failed to understand that as with every concession made to them
before it just produces an even wilder new demand.
The obvious conclusion from the complexity of
Brexit and from the fact that the best the government can hope for is to expend
massive amounts of time and money to recreate something as close as possible to
the pre-Brexit situation is to ask: why bother? Why not, at the least, backtrack to
the soft Brexit that would both honour the Referendum result, be in line with
what many said and believed a vote for Brexit meant, and do the least amount of
damage? If the only answer to that is the wrath of the ultra Brexiters, then
their very implacability negates that objection. Since they will in all events
scream betrayal we might as well face up to that whilst doing ourselves minimal
damage since we will also have to face up to it even whilst doing ourselves
great damage. The answer to that, of course, is that the ‘we’ and the ‘us’ in
this is not the country, it is the Tory Party and May’s overriding desire to
prevent it imploding. And that is the fourth point that stands out: these
position papers are less about the customs union and the Irish border than they
are about the position of the Tory Party.
Update: For
withering assessments of the position papers, see Ian Dunt on customs
and on the Irish
border. On the customs paper including the issue of customs union
membership being inseparable from EU membership, see Oliver
Norgrove’s blog.
Today has
been frustrating in that there were two things I wanted to write about, both of
which were written about by others, and more ably than I would have managed no
doubt, before I had found time to set finger to keyboard.
The first
was the furore about an interesting new study
of voters’ preferences as to how Brexit should be undertaken which was reported
by Buzzfeed last Friday. It is based on ESRC funded research conducted by
LSE and Oxford academics and is a serious and important piece of work. The
reporting of it, however, has been extremely misleading and in places simply
inaccurate. Amongst other things, it has been reported to show that most
remain voters now back hard Brexit and that 29% of remain voters support the
deportation of EU nationals. The misreporting reflects a number of complexities
in the research, which
the authors tried to explain in a blog on Sunday and which were also
explained by another
very useful blog (author unknown) here. But it was most incisively
explained by Ben
Chu in the Independent today. His
was the blog I had been intending to write and I would strongly recommend everyone
reading this to look at it. Even so, the damage has been done and whatever
corrections are issued it will enter Brexiter
mythology as proof of public support for hard Brexit (interesting to note
how Brexiter disdain for academic experts disappears when they believe that the
research helps them).
My second
possible topic was Sunday’s Fox-Hammond article saying that whilst they agreed
there would be a post March 2019 ‘transition period’ it would be one in which
the UK was neither a member of the single market nor the customs union. This is
a nonsensical proposition, which categorically will not happen because it is by
definition not a transition: it’s out. So what they are describing is the cliff
edge that a transition period is meant to avoid. It seems to envisage a
situation in which Britain somehow retains all the benefits of membership and
yet has left. To call this politically illiterate would be to flatter it way
beyond reason.
But this was
laid bare first by Ian
Dunt on politics.co.uk and later by John
Springford, of the Centre for European Reform, in the Guardian, and again I recommend both of these pieces. They make
some similar points about the impossibility of the Fox-Hammond line both
politically and practically (e.g. in terms of the timescale for preparing
customs facilities and systems). But Dunt goes on to link this to the arguments
of what he (appropriately) calls the Brexit “headbangers” as exemplified by
Bernard Jenkin in an interview on BBC Radio 4 today.
Jenkin
regards the cliff edge of a Brexit without agreements – not just on customs but
on a whole array of other things, such as flying rights - in place as a kind of
recalcitrance, if not outright malice, on the part of the EU. In this, he
exhibits the Brexiter mindset that I
have written about in another post in which all of the arrangements that
the UK benefits from as part of the EU are a kind of natural right, existing
independently of those arrangements. So that whilst, for Jenkin, leaving the EU
is absolutely crucial it also makes no difference to anything – or, at least,
to none of the things he regards as nice or necessary. As if, somehow, Brexit doesn’t mean Brexit.
We are going
to hear a lot more of this kind of “reasoning” in the coming months and years,
as the inevitable consequences of Brexit are disowned by the Brexiters and attributed
to the punitive EU. I actually don’t think that the Brexiters (Boris Johnson
apart) are lying in the normal sense of the term. It seems more like the
brainwashing found in weird religious cults.
Be that as
it may, something very peculiar, dangerous and unprecedented is happening in
the British polity. We’ve all had the experience of living with government
policies we thought completely misguided and pursued on the basis of faulty
logic and flawed evidence. But now we have Cabinet ministers and senior
backbenchers saying in all seriousness things which are meaningless and
nonsensical in very basic ways that go well beyond issues of interpretation or
ideological dispute. The misreporting of the LSE/Oxford study can in large part
be attributed to misunderstandings of complex statistics. But what the likes of
Fox, Hammond and Jenkin are saying is the political equivalent of 2+2 = 5.
It is on the
basis of such nonsense that Britain is being driven ever closer to catastrophe.
That will most obviously be an economic catastrophe but it will also be a
political catastrophe. A report
on Reuters today highlighted the frustration and bemusement of leave voters
that Brexit had not yet been delivered and seemed to be mired in complexity and
delay. Well might they feel that, given the constant promises made to them
during the Referendum campaign that leaving would be quick, easy, and painless.
Now that the campaign is over, they are still being told the same thing and the
disillusion and anger will grow. The central political question for the coming
years is whether that anger is directed at those who tell them that 2+2 = 5 or
at those who remind them that, like it or not, 2+2 = 4.
Readers of
this blog can hardly fail to be aware that I regard Brexit as a national disaster.
Even so, it is extraordinary that the government seem to take every opportunity
to make things worse than they need to be. That applies most obviously to the
big decisions such as insisting Brexit must mean hard Brexit including the ECJ red
line, triggering Article 50 without proper preparation, and then wasting months
with an election. But having made those decisions the government then, in
smaller matters, continually makes foolish mistakes. With the holiday season in
progress there have only been such small matters on display this week, but they
are indicative of the wider mess the government are creating.
Item one. On
Thursday the Prime
Minister’s spokesman re-iterated that the Brexit timetable remains that
stated by the PM in her Lancaster House speech. That is, that she envisages
both exit and future trade terms to be agreed within the two year period ending
in March 2019. But every serious person knows that this is impossible, and even
most cabinet ministers have acknowledged it. For that matter, Theresa
May herself appears to know it. So what conceivable purpose is served by
pretending otherwise? Any halfway competent leader would be preparing both the
general public and politicians – and especially those supportive of Brexit –
for the fact that it is going to take longer, probably much longer, than this.
We are no
longer in the Referendum campaign when Leave could make mendacious claims about
how quick and easy the exit negotiations would be, even lying that they would
be completed before
triggering Article 50 (something legally impossible). Instead, for better
or for worse, we are now in what is supposedly the governmental implementation
of Brexit, and that can’t be done on the basis of fantasies. It is not as if
May will be able to avoid facing up to the true timescale eventually so she
would surely be politically wiser to do so sooner rather than later.
Item two. On
Wednesday, the Prime
Minister’s office announced a ‘charm offensive’ in which diplomats and
officials will explain Britain’s Brexit strategy to, especially, the EU-27
countries. It hardly needs saying that this puts the rickety cart well ahead of
a horse that should in kindness be sent to the glue factory. Britain scarcely
has a Brexit strategy, as it is still under
dispute within the cabinet. We have failed, unlike the EU, to produce
detailed position papers for the negotiations we initiated, although these
are apparently to be unveiled in September. The White Paper is “riddled
with contradictions”, as this
excellent article from Polly Ruth Polak explains in some detail, and on key
issues such as the Irish border no meaningful proposals have been made at all,
as Irish leader Leo
Varadkar recently lamented.
But this is
not the main deficiency with the supposed charm offensive. Rather, it reveals
the continuing inability of the government to understand what
the EU have repeatedly made clear which is that Brexit it not going to be a
matter of bi-lateral discussions between the UK and each member state. The
EU-27 will negotiate as a bloc. And whilst it might be said that the ‘charm
offensive’ is an exercise in communication rather than an attempt at negotiation
that is a line so thin as to be meaningless: if the aim is not to have an
impact upon the negotiations in some way then it has no point anyway. In fact,
it is an approach which was already tried in the ‘divide and rule’ pre-Article
50 period in an attempt to pre-empt the negotiations which the EU rightly said
could not occur before the triggering letter. It did not succeed then and it
will not succeed now: it is completely unrealistic to expect otherwise.
Item three. Also
on Wednesday, Brexit Secretary David
Davis addressed one of the many thorny issues in the exit negotiations,
namely that of citizens’ rights. But he did so in the most bizarre manner,
saying that the terms the EU is offering to British nationals living in EU-27
countries are unfair because they do not give those nationals freedom of
movement rights across the EU-27, just residence rights in that country where
they reside. The unfairness, he claimed, was that this did not meet the EU
principle of reciprocity because EU-27 citizens residing in the UK would
continue to have freedom of movement rights across the EU-27.
This seems
almost wilfully to introduce an obvious misunderstanding into proceedings which
are already complex. Since the UK is choosing to leave the EU (and moreover the
single market) in part in order to exit freedom of movement rules it follows
that British nationals will lose their freedom of movement rights. That is true
for all British nationals whether resident in the UK or in an EU-27 country.
However, no EU-27 country is leaving the EU and therefore no EU-27 citizen
loses freedom of movement rights within the EU-27. Reciprocity does not and
could not mean that British people in an EU-27 country have the same freedom of
movement rights as citizens of EU-27 countries in the UK because the British loss
of those rights is entailed by leaving the EU. The issue is the residency
rights of the two groups.
If the
argument is that British people should enjoy freedom of movement rights in the
EU-27 because EU-27 people do then that is an argument for staying in the EU,
or at least the single market. It seems that Davis has not grasped that, to
coin a phrase, Brexit means Brexit. Or, alternatively, that he still thinks
that ‘having our cake and eating it’ is possible, in the sense that, somehow,
British people could continue to have freedom of movement rights across the EU-27
whereas EU-27 people would not have freedom of movement rights to Britain. That
sentiment, in fact, was often expressed by Brexiters prior to the Referendum so
it is not inconceivable that Davis shares it.
The thread
that links these three announcements is that they illustrate and compound the
way that the Brexit government is completely unrealistic and confused about the
meaning of the Brexit they are enacting and the processes, both political and
legal, through which it must be enacted. It is this which feeds the widespread view
of Britain’s approach to Brexit being in chaos, with some in the EU apparently
wondering if this is in fact a
cunning negotiating plan rather than genuine chaos. But as the ever-acute David
Allen Green has pointed out in his recent FT blog, “the government looks as
if it is in disarray because it is in disarray”, making repeated “unforced
errors” in its handling of Brexit.
But perhaps unforced
errors is not quite the right term. Errors they certainly are, but they are
driven by the underlying force of the Brexit ultras. First, of course, because
they set us on this crazy path without any credible plan and on the basis of
breath taking lies. But, second, because they continue to urge us to even
greater follies – recent examples including Patrick
Minford’s call for an exit with no deal at all, John Longworth’s
call to walk away if there is no deal by early 2018 and Jacob Rees-Mogg’s
denial that there is any payment needed to settle accounts. Such reckless, delusional,
irresponsibility is what drives us ever closer to the edge of a very steep cliff.
Yesterday’s statement
from the government about the planned new UK Data Protection Bill is the
first concrete example of something which has been in prospect ever since the
publication of the Brexit
White Paper last February. The White Paper made it clear that post-Brexit
the UK would seek to maintain a great deal of regulatory harmonization with the
EU, with data protection mentioned as one example (paragraphs 8.38 to 8.40).
The Data
Protection Bill will be the first fruit of that. In one way, it can be seen as business
as usual in that Britain needs to comply with the new EU General Data
Protection Regulation (GDPR) which comes into force in May 2018 when, of
course, Britain will still be a member of the EU. Yet as yesterday’s announcement
made clear, the Bill will “prepare Britain for Brexit” by ensuring data
transfer and its associated business can continue smoothly after leaving the
EU. The reason this is necessary is that on exit Britain will be a third party
nation but such nations need to demonstrate regulatory equivalence with the
GDPR in order to trade freely with the EU.
This is a clear
illustration of how, whether in the EU or not, the UK in practice needs to
comply with EU regulations. There is a strong element of regulatory pull in any
situation where a smaller economy sits alongside a much larger economy because
proximity also means that – again, whether in or out of the EU – a large
proportion of UK trade will be with the EU. This is so regardless of what the
trading arrangement turns out to be, although of course the absolute volume of
trade will be very much affected by the nature of that arrangement.
As regards
the GDPR, since it has been some time in the making, Britain has had the
opportunity to shape the new regulations. But once we have left we will become ‘rule
takers’ – not only of any further developments in data protection regulation
but also across all of the very numerous areas of EU regulation. This is so
even if we leave the single market, as the government plans. In fact it is
especially true if we leave the single market in that if we stayed in (as an
EFTA member) we would have somewhat more scope to influence regulations than as
a third party nation (albeit less than as an EU member).
Nor is the
issue confined to the formulation of law and regulation. Equally important will
be its ongoing interpretation and enforcement which in the EU means the ECJ, of
course. But the government have, for unnecessary reasons of pure dogma, made freedom from
ECJ jurisdiction a ‘red line’ (something which is causing an endless number of
conundrums and disputes, from Euratom to air travel to citizens’ rights). So this creates
a new problem. If UK law (in this case on data protection) follows EU law, then
what happens as over time the ECJ makes judgments on the interpretation and application
of the latter?
This is the
force behind today’s
call from Lord Neuberger, the President of Britain’s Supreme Court, for
guidance from the government as to how to treat ECJ rulings after Brexit. Steve
Peers, on his EU Law Blog, pointed out that the White Paper implied that EU
case law would continue to be relevant to British courts post-Brexit in the
same way as at the moment, but that what this meant was unclear – as it
remains. In reality it is impossible to see how the UK could effectively
maintain compatibility with EU regulation in the way envisaged by, in this
case, the data protection legislation if over time its interpretation and
application diverged by virtue of incompatible decisions in the EU and UK
courts (this is one of the underlying issues I drew attention to in my
recent post on the Brexiter fantasy that current regulatory harmonization
makes a UK-EU trade deal easy). The likelihood is that, in practice, ECJ
judgments will be applied in the UK. Indeed the government’s own formulation,
both in the White Paper and in its spokesperson’s response to Lord Neuberger,
that Brexit will end the “direct jurisdiction” of the ECJ seems to suggest just
that: what will happen is ‘indirect jurisdiction’.
So the data
protection legislation is an early glimpse of just how meaningless the mantra
of ‘taking back control’ and ‘making our own laws’ really is. The reality is
that – unless the plan is for complete economic autarky, and I wouldn’t put
that past some of the Brexit Jacobins – the UK will have less control over law making
than it had as an EU member. The data protection case is an example of how, as I
wrote at the time of the White Paper, what is in prospect is the creation
of a whole host of shadow regulations and institutions to mirror those of the
EU. In other words, a situation where the reality
is less control will be created in order to give the illusion of having control so as to assuage (what the White Paper
calls) the “feeling” of having lost
control by being in the EU.
Another
round-up of the most interesting analysis of Brexit I have read in the last
week.
Former Tory
MP Matthew Parris tore into Conservative
Brexit incompetence in The Times.
It’s paywalled, but this tweet
provides a readable version.
Philosopher
Helen de Cruz wrote a thoughtful
and moving meditation on home, immigration and Brexit on the Politics means
Politics site.
A very acute
summary of where the Brexit negotiations stand was provided by Brendan
Donnelly on the LSE Brexit blog.
Signs of a
move towards a degree of realism amongst thoughtful Brexiters came from Vote
Leave activist Oliver
Norgrove in an open letter to hard Brexiters on his blog.
Labour
politician Denis
MacShane’s discussion of Brexit and Foreign Policy on the Carnegie Europe
site was thoughtful, if depressing.
There have
been a lot of excellent things written this week about what is belatedly being
recognized as the crucial issue of the Irish border, and this
by Siobhan Fenton in Prospect was
perhaps the best of them. Simon
Jenkins’s piece in The Guardian
is also worth a read.
Professor
Kenneth Armstrong of Cambridge University’s discussion
of Brexit ‘originalism’ on The Conversation site is – sorry for the pun –
an original take on the schisms within the Brexiter camp.
My two
favourite Brexit commentators wrote great pieces this week: Ian
Dunt on Brexit transitional agreements on politics.co.uk and David
Allen Green on the same topic in the FT. Green also wrote a
very incisive piece on the Referendum question and an excellent
analysis of the ‘EEA option’ both also in the FT (paywalled). These two are
stand-out commentators for being invariably well-informed and on the pulse of
Brexit debates, and whilst both write elegantly and sharply they are quite
different in style: Green forensic and limpid; Dunt rhetorical and elegiac.
Almost
undiscussed in the debates on Brexit so far has been its effect (for both the
UK and the EU) on the numerous agreements, both trade and non-trade, between
the EU and third parties. This
piece (written a few weeks ago, but I only read it this week) by Guillaume van der
Loo and Steven Blockmans on the CEPS site is a clear introduction to this
very complex issue.
Pick of the
week for me, for its punchy writing and neat drawing together of numerous aspects of the Brexit debacle, was this
scathing polemic by Jenni Russell in the New York Times.
Recommended only
because they lay bare the paucity of Brexiter thinking are two stupendously
dishonest pieces. The first by Brendan
O’Neill in The Spectator argues
that leaver voters are heroic because a poll shows that they are happy with Brexit
even if it means economic damage to the UK and to their own families, an
argument which would carry slightly more weight had Leave campaigned on the
basis that this would be the effect of Brexit rather than having claimed that
any such damage was just ‘Project Fear’ scaremongering; the
second by Daniel Hannan (he of “absolutely nobody is talking
about threatening our place the single market” fame) on the ‘good news’ of
Brexit in the New York Times which is
tendentious and mendacious in equal measure: there is not a single line in it
which could inspire anything other than contempt from anyone remotely wedded to
honest debate.
Finally,
anyone reading this who missed my own blogposts this week will find an
analysis of the Brexiter myth peddled by Liam Fox and others that existing
regulatory harmonization makes a Brexit trade deal easy, and a
detailed rebuttal of John Redwood’s blogpost on the current Brexit
situation. Thanks to Ceri Shields
for writing to me about these posts to say that “your clean and elegant prose style is always a
pleasure. People you’ll never meet out here in internet land appreciate it”. Much appreciated.
[Acknowledgements: Thanks to Polly Polak of Universidad de Salamanca,
Spain, Jennifer Zerk of Jennifer
Zerk Consulting and Associate Fellow of
Chatham House, and Oliver Norgrove
of Royal Holloway, University of London for alerting me to some of the things
cited (and to others not cited). Neither they nor the institutions with which
they are affiliated are, of course, responsible for any interpretation I have
put upon those citations here].
Updated with minor edits 5 August 2017.
John
Redwood’s blog post (“Brexit policy and how to negotiate”, 1
August 2017) may be taken to represent the views of the more
hardline Brexiters about the current situation. Indeed, to the extent that he
is regarded by Brexiters as one of their leading intellectual lights it may be
taken as representing their strongest case. This post is a reply.
Redwood: “I am glad the PM has made
clear we will end freedom of movement and have our own migration policy on
exit, as I reminded people here on this blog last week”.
Response:
The PM’s position on freedom of movement is not clear, in fact, as Ian Dunt’s
analysis (“No. 10 announcement on free movement completely
without meaning”, politics.co.uk, 31 July 2017) explains. What is
clear is that with her authority diminished by the General Election result,
this and other policies are a matter of dispute within the government, with
different ministers openly articulating different positions.
Redwood: “She has also clarified the
issue of a transitional Agreement. The UK has not asked for one. We still have
19 months left to negotiate a proper Agreement. Negotiating a transitional one
would require prior consent to a full Agreement, then allowing discussion of
how to transition from the one to the other. It is not intrinsically easier to
negotiate a Transitional Agreement than a permanent Agreement, and requires
consent to where the two parties are going during transition”.
Response:
This is correct both as regards the fact that the UK has not asked for a
transitional agreement and as regards the incoherence of the position of those
arguing for one without any clear idea of what the end state of the transition
would be. However to say that there are 19 months left is to forget that the
agreement needs ratification. So there are really more like 14 months left.
Redwood: “There are those in the
Opposition, the media and business who seem to want to turn the EU/UK talks
into a negotiation amongst ourselves about what we are trying to achieve. This
is damaging to the UK’s official negotiating strategy, as it leads some in the
EU to think that if they delay and prod the UK will change its mind and offer
to carry on with budget contributions, freedom of movement and the other items
that so favour the rest of the EU”.
Response:
This is misleading in that it is those within the Tory Party and more especially
the Cabinet who are conducting this internal negotiation, precisely because
there is no agreement amongst them as to what the UK’s strategy should be. In
this they have been extraordinarily irresponsible (to an extent without
precedent in modern British political history) since they have already chosen
of their own volition to trigger Article 50 without having reached such an
agreement. What we are seeing, as we have since at least 2015, is the internal
divisions of the Tory Party overriding any sense of care about the national
interest, as pointed out by former Tory MP Matthew Parris in a recent
excoriating article (“The Conservatives are criminally
incompetent” The Times 28 July 2017 [£]).
What is damaging to the UK’s negotiation from an EU perspective is their dismay that the UK has no clarity or
detail. It is true that business groups are trying to open up the
possibility of a transitional agreement, and the reason for that is obvious:
businesses are well aware that an agreement within the Article 50 period is
impossible and that without a transition there will be catastrophic effects for
business. That is simply pragmatic business self-interest: what is surprising
is that the current Tory Party are so remote from business and so pre-occupied
with pursuing an anti-business policy in the form of Brexit.
Redwood: “MPs and others in senior
positions in the Labour party keep changing their minds about membership of the
single market and customs union, long after Parliament has voted decisively
both to send the Article 50 letter and to exit both the single market and
Customs Union”.
Response:
Correct. The Labour position is completely incoherent.
Redwood: “Let’s have another go at
reminding people what the UK has already decided. The people voted to leave the
EU. They did so with both official campaigns pointing out this meant leaving
the single market and customs Union. They voted leave to take back control,
especially of our money, our laws and our borders”.
Response:
This is simply untrue. The Leave campaign never clearly specified that voting
to leave the EU meant voting to leave the single market and the customs union.
Indeed many leading Leave campaigners including Daniel Hannan
and Owen Paterson explicitly said that it did not mean leaving the single
market. Moreover when the Treasury put out its long-term economic forecasts for Brexit in
April 2016 it explicitly identified three variants of Brexit:
continued single market membership, a free trade agreement, and WTO trading.
There was never any sense given to the electorate that leaving the EU meant any
one thing. This is a matter of record and to deny it is simply to lie. Indeed,
the whole situation that the government now finds itself in derives from the
fact that the Referendum result was a vote against
membership of the EU but not a vote for
what should happen next. That is absolutely fundamental to any honest
discussion of Brexit, as is a recognition that the country was virtually split
down the middle by the Referendum and the need, therefore, to find a way
forward that reflects this.
Redwood: “Remain supporters then
forced legislation and Parliamentary votes to test out the will of the people.
Parliament voted overwhelmingly to leave the EU. The Commons since the election
has voted to leave the single market and customs union as part of that, as was
always implied in the previous Parliamentary votes”.
Response:
‘Forced’ is a peculiar way of putting the fact that as a matter of law a
Parliamentary vote was required, but the fact of the result of that vote is not
in dispute.
Redwood: “Some Remain supporters now
want to invent a Transitional Agreement, requiring the UK to go on paying
budget contributions, accepting freedom of movement, and continuing to accept
new EU laws. This is not government policy, and is clearly against the wishes
of the people as expressed in the Referendum”.
Response:
The idea of a transitional agreement comes from Cabinet Ministers, such as
Philip Hammond, who may have supported remaining in the EU but now accept that
the UK is leaving. Whatever its merits, it cannot be said to be either for or
against the wishes of the people as expressed in the Referendum, since they
were never asked that question.
Redwood: “When asked why they want
this, they usually argue that the other EU member states will damage their
trade with us and our trade with them if we do not accept continuing features
of EU membership. It is a cruel irony that the most pro EU are the most
negative about the nature and likely actions of our EU partners”.
Response:
This, to be both frank and charitable, is childish. It is the UK which is
choosing to leave the EU, not the other way around, and that choice has
consequences for the trading relationship. Redwood and Brexiters in general
need to have the courage and honesty to take responsibility for that choice. If
‘we do not accept continuing features of EU membership’ then of course we do
not continue to trade on the same terms. To coin a phrase, Brexit means Brexit.
The issue isn’t about any benevolence or lack of it on the part of the EU, it
is just a matter of reality: if the ‘will of the people’ is for the UK to be a
third party state then that is what it will be, with all the consequences
entailed.
Redwood: “They are also going to be
proved wrong on this as on so much else about Brexit. WTO rules work fine, if
the rest of the EU really does want to damage its valuable exports of
agricultural produce and cars. Their more voluminous exports will attract far
more tariff than our sales to them. Under WTO rules and international law the
EU cannot stop companies and individuals in its territory buying and selling
things with the UK”.
Response:
This is a repeat of the usual ultra-Brexiter mantra and exhibits its usual
detachment from reality by invoking the car industry (see here for discussion) and the UK
trade deficit (supposedly an advantage, and yet we have a services surplus so
what of that?) and failing to recognize that a far higher percentage of UK
trade is with the EU-27 than EU-27 trade is with the UK. But more fundamentally
it ignores the fact that tariffs are not nearly as important as non-tariff
barriers and that WTO rules, far from ‘working fine’ would be a catastrophe for
the UK as has been repeatedly explained for example in summary by me, but also by trade experts, by businesspeople, by journalists, and by the better-informed Brexiters such as Peter North who concludes: “One
can say, unequivocally, that the UK could not survive as a trading nation by
relying on the WTO Option. It would be an unmitigated disaster, and no
responsible government would allow it”.
Final note: There is a
huge irony here. It is precisely the fact that crashing out of the EU on WTO
terms would poleaxe the UK that has driven the call for transitional arrangements from those trying
pragmatically to salvage something from the year-zero ideologues such as Redwood. But for those of
us who want to remain in the EU those ideologues are actually helpful, in that
if they are successful in driving Britain to the brink of disaster they will assist our attempts to save our country from going over it, whereas the ‘pragmatists’
because they sound more reasonable are more likely to take us all the way to
disaster, albeit more slowly. Of course it would be far better for Britain if
we had not been put in the current position at all, and whatever now happens
the Brexiters have irrevocably damaged our country, economically, culturally
and geo-politically. Still, given that we are where we are, the position taken
by Redwood (and his fellow ultra-Brexiters), dishonest and absurd as it is,
might just help us to avoid the worst. If the ultras can defeat the pragmatists
there’s just a tiny chance that the national catastrophe of Brexit will be
averted.
[Updated with minor edits and reformatting, 2 August 2017]