Friday 12 July 2024

The return of competence and why it matters

What a difference a week makes. Not so much because of policy changes, though there have been some crisp announcements, including discarding the stupid, illegal and immoral Rwanda policy and lifting the ban on new onshore wind farms. And certainly not because Britain’s many problems have been solved; on the contrary, we have repeatedly been told how slow and difficult fixing them will be. But that, actually, does begin to point to the difference. It is a sign of reasonable, adult, and honest politics.

The return of basic competence

That is what is new, and it was manifested again and again this week. Smoothly, methodically, a cabinet was constructed. It is peopled largely by those who have been shadowing their portfolios for a while and who have already given careful thought to them, or who have been immersed in them by dint of having chaired the relevant select committee. Outside the cabinet, but in important ministerial posts, there was a peppering of non-political experts, Sir Patrick Vallance for the science brief, James Timpson for prisons. As a ‘government of all the talents’, this is far more convincing than Boris Johnson’s recruitment of David Frost or, further back, Gordon Brown’s appointment of Digby Jones, blowhards both.

These are all, for the most part, serious, competent people, for all that many are untested in government. That, and the lack of drama accompanying the process, might be thought of as the bare minimum, and it’s not as if Starmer has not had plenty of time to plan for it. But it is far too long since even this bare minimum has been the norm. Recall Johnson’s first cabinet, selected solely on fealty to Brexit. Recall the mess of his 2020 reshuffle when, rather than be subjected to the absurd demands of Dominic Cummings, Chancellor Sajid Javid resigned. Recall how, at their first meeting after his 2019 election victory, Johnson forced his new cabinet to chant the dishonest promises he had made.

As for competence and fitness for office, recall the almost endless list of recent Tory ministers who failed those tests. It is hardly necessary even to give examples, and certainly impossible to list them all, let alone to identify the worst. I suppose Chris ‘Failing’ Grayling might be the most compelling candidate for that title and, in case there was any danger of forgetting him amidst so many others, that danger was removed by his inclusion, at Sunak’s behest, in this week’s Dissolution honours list. It was a final, graceless, shameless spit in the country’s face from the outgoing regime.

Recall, too, the prodigious churn of those ministers over the last few years. Of course, it remains to be seen how Labour fare in this respect, but, as Catherine Haddon of the Institute for Government argues, the composition of this new cabinet suggests that Starmer has begun by putting an emphasis on continuity and stability, alongside competence.

Repairing some of the Brexit damage

So - methodical, undramatic, competent, stable. The same words apply to Starmer’s first press conference and first appearance in the House of Commons, and to Rachel Reeves’s first speech as Chancellor and her launch of the National Wealth Fund. And these words alone show the stark contrast with what has characterized recent political life. We simply haven’t seen anything like this for years. More particularly, these words also represent one reparation of the damages of Brexit. For, as I outlined early on in the election campaign, a large part of the chaos and incompetence they replace was directly attributable to Brexit. It's worth emphasizing this point because, of course, it is familiar territory that Brexit itself is not going to be reversed by this government. Yet this does not preclude addressing any of the harms associated with it.

Governmental competence at home is one example, but so too is repairing Britain’s international relations and reputation. Thus Foreign Secretary David Lammy immediately travelled to Germany, Poland and Sweden saying “it’s time to reset our relationship with our European friends and allies”. Reset from what? Self-evidently, from the damage of Brexit. And a re-set to what? An ambitious security pact, encompassing not just defence but also energy, climate change and irregular migration. On the latter, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper discussed border security issues with her counterparts in EU countries and Europol. Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds is already talking about seeking improvements in the trading relationship with the EU, and already getting positive noises of potential support from the Irish Taoiseach. And Nick Thomas-Symonds, who has the pivotal post-Brexit role of Minister for European Relations, had an immediate and positive conversation with Maros Sefcovic.

Meanwhile Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn immediately hosted a meeting with Northern Ireland’s First and Deputy First Ministers, promising an improved relationship with Westminster. Starmer himself went on a tour of the devolved nations, also seeking a ‘re-set’ of relations, and emphasizing Britain’s commitment to the Good Friday Agreement when in Belfast. He then headed to Washington, where alongside the NATO summit he met some European leaders with the avowed intention of “forging closer UK-EU relations” and had a bi-lateral meeting with President Biden. There are to be further meetings with the Irish and French leaders in advance of the meeting of the European Political Community, which is being hosted by the UK.

I’m not suggesting that all of these things are solely to do with repairing Brexit damage, but there is no doubt that the way Brexit was done with almost no regard for the devolved administrations did great harm to, and caused a new and specific resentment within, the relationships between those administrations and the London government. There’s certainly no doubt that Brexit opened a particular crisis in Northern Ireland’s politics, with consequences for the UK’s relationship with the US, and especially with Biden. Equally, Brexit did great harm to the UK’s relationship with the US generally, so much of which had been predicated on the UK as a bridge between the US and the EU, and tellingly, it’s reported that Biden suggested to Starmer that improving UK-EU relations now would help to reinstate that role.

Re-setting the UK-EU relationship

There’s no cause to get carried away by all this. These are very early days, and most of what has happened is ritualistic, or at least diplomatic, politeness – though how could it be anything else, yet? The hard politics of, especially, re-setting the relationship with the EU has still to be done. On that, there is no shortage of wise advice available to the new government, none wiser than that in the excellent open letter written to Keir Starmer by Charles Grant, the Director of the Centre for European Reform. It contains important insights about both the possibilities for what could be agreed with the EU and the domestic politics of delivering it. There are similarly insightful suggestions as regards, specifically, a security pact from the Royal United Service Institute.

What unfolds from now on for the UK-EU relationship is going to be a very complicated story. The trade expert David Henig has usefully pointed out that there is not going to be a single ‘re-negotiation’, but a whole swathe of “inter-linked discussions” about different policy areas, undertaken via different institutional mechanisms, and involving different actors. It will be a big task to hold all of this within a coherent strategy. But what we have seen this week, and, like the cabinet formation, it has been done quickly, methodically, and undramatically, is the broad direction of intended travel, which is towards rapprochement. In that respect there has already been a decisive break, certainly in tone, and potentially in substance, with the last eight years of Tory government.

Moreover, it is a break being enacted without internal opposition in the governing party in the sense that, whilst the latest polling shows that the vast majority in that party want to go further than the government seem to be proposing, none want it to go less far, or to pursue a more antagonistic relationship. That, too, is a clear break with the Tory government, which faced fury from within at any step to improve things (or even at seeing a better relationship as being an improvement). Conversely, whilst there have been squeals of outrage in the pro-Brexit press and from some Brexiter politicians, another difference that has come this week is that, suddenly, their voices seem all but irrelevant.

The legitimacy of Labour’s mandate

Although the speed and energy with which this has re-set has begun have been impressive, the basic approach to this (and other policy areas) has not come as a surprise. It is exactly in line with the promises Labour made during in the campaign and had signalled for months, if not years. It is the platform that won them a huge victory. Yet the other theme of this first post-election week has been a buzz of commentary and criticism suggesting, both explicitly and implicitly, that Labour may have won a majority but do not have a legitimate mandate to govern. The point, of course, is that the vote share was so small compared with the size of the majority.

I discussed this briefly in my previous post, written in sleepless haste early on the morning of the day after the election. It poses some genuine questions about the case for electoral reform, but they are being weaponized in misleading and sometimes dishonest ways. And whilst we are very fortunate indeed that there has been nothing remotely like the attempts to derail the handover of power that accompanied Biden’s presidential victory, these insinuations about the legitimacy of Labour’s win are a very distant echo of them.

As I said in that post, the First-Past-The-Post (FPTP) system is difficult to defend on rational grounds (though not impossible). But it is the system we have, and, within that system, Labour won the majority it did. More than that, it did so having recognized exactly what was needed to win within such a system, namely to achieve the greatest possible ‘vote efficiency’, so that, rather than piling up huge majorities in some constituencies, Labour sought, and gained, smaller majorities but in more constituencies. That was also associated with a policy programme, including that related to Brexit, which lost some of the votes they would otherwise have received in seats where they could ‘afford to’, whilst gaining votes in seats where they needed more in order to win. There’s nothing illegitimate in that, and in a sense it broadens support for the government, whilst also making it more shallow.

Nor is there anything illegitimate in voters choosing, as it seems they did in large numbers, to vote tactically for whichever party had the best chance of defeating that party such voters least wanted elected, rather than voting for that party which they most wanted to win. I did it myself. It has always happened to an extent, and it happens in other countries’ voting systems, too, as the recent French election demonstrated. If it did so more on this occasion, then that is partly because of the level of hostility to the Tories, and partly because it is now easier to identify how to cast tactical votes effectively. This also means that, in itself, share of vote does not tell us everything about voters’ preferences. They have adapted their votes in the light of the FPTP system, so it doesn’t follow that, under a Proportional Representation (PR) system, they would vote in the same proportions.

Moreover, and it was clearly the case in this election, voters’ willingness to choose one party is partly about their view of the other party that may let in, as well as of the one they hope it will keep out. To be more concrete, as I pointed out last week, tactical voting against the Tories (especially by those who voted LibDem in previously safe Tory seats) will in part have been informed by the fact that they were not put off by the prospect of a Labour government. And on top of all that, some who did not vote Labour, and some who did not vote at all, will have made those decisions in the expectation that Labour would win without their votes. That may be part of the reason why the percentage of those who decided which way to vote on polling day is higher for the other parties than for Labour

So for all of these reasons, the outcome of the election, for all the gross disparities it has created, is not illegitimate, since it is a result of the system which we have (and which has produced similar disparities in the past), and the decisions made by voters in the light of how it works. You can only win according to the rules, and if you do, then the win is a legitimate one. That is a quite different issue from whether the system itself is a good system and there have long been very serious doubts about that. So, by all means, let’s have a ‘public debate’, perhaps a Royal Commission and even, heaven help us, a referendum, about changing the electoral system. But, in the meantime, it is quite wrong to use those doubts as a way of casting doubt on the legitimacy of this particular government.

Farage’s opportunism and his opportunity

Of course, the reason this is being raised so widely now is only partly to do with the Labour vote share. It is also because of Farage’s complaints that Reform’s share of the seats is so much less than its share of the votes. That isn’t new. Almost the same thing happened with UKIP in the past, for example in 2015, when they achieved one seat on the back of 12.6% of the votes, compared with Reform’s five seats from 14.3% of the votes at this election. (It has also happened to the LibDems for decades, and they, like Labour, found a way to maximize vote efficiency this time, in their case by focusing everything on a relatively small number of constituencies, a large number of which they won, in this case making their share of the vote very similar to their share of the seats.)

That this problem isn’t new doesn’t make it less of a problem. But, whilst UKIP complained about it before, Reform are doing so more vociferously (and now with support from some Tories) as they now have ambitions to government, rather than being primarily orientated towards leaving the EU. This is actually a key new development in the UK political landscape, since it is the first time a populist party has had such an ambition, no matter how distant the prospect. UKIP really had no aspiration beyond pressurizing the Conservatives over Europe. Reform want to replace them and, given the parlous state of the Tory party, that isn’t entirely inconceivable.

As for Farage, we can be quite certain that, but for the fact that it doesn’t favour his party, he would be insisting that “the fine British tradition that has served our great nation for so long should not be set aside for some ‘continental’ jiggery-pokery. It has given us strong government! Do we really,” – and here he would give his peculiarly repellent, man-of-the-people, gurning chuckle – “want to be like the Italians? Really?” He might well also point out that we have had a referendum on whether or not to keep FPTP and decisively voted to do so, and the will of the people, once disclosed in this way, can never be revisited.

Strictly speaking, all that is irrelevant to the case for replacing FPTP with some form of PR, as Ian Dunt has persuasively argued this week, which stands or falls on its own merits regardless of what anyone thinks of Farage. There is a counter-argument, which is that there is a democratic case for a system which makes it hard for extremist parties to gain representation. But no one should be under any illusion that Farage is driven by the desire for a disinterested debate about political theory. He sees that there is an opportunity within grasp, and he is correct.

What is at stake?

There are many excellent blogs, even if they now mainly go under the name of ‘newsletters’, competing for too little reading time (making me especially grateful to the many readers who continue to read this one), but one I always make time for is Matt Carr’s Infernal Machine. That’s not because I always agree with it, though I often do, but because it is wide-ranging, intellectually sophisticated, and well-written. In this week’s post, Carr criticizes as “premature” and “not a little lazy” those commentators who have “hailed Labour’s victory as a defeat for populism”.

He's right. At best, it’s a breathing space. More to the point, as commentators as diverse Robert Shrimsley in the Financial Times (£) and Fintan O’Toole in Foreign Affairs have observed, this government could represent a ‘last chance’ for Britain to hold back populism and demonstrate the efficacy of ‘centrism’. If it fails, it is all too easy to easy to imagine Farage’s siren call that, now, both Conservatives and Labour have been found wanting, and it is time to ‘try something different’.

By sounding innocuous, it will have an insidious appeal well beyond Reform’s core vote. It was very noticeable during the campaign how rattled Farage was when Reform candidates and activists were exposed as racists or, in other ways, disgraceful. As with RN in France, the strategy is to try to present a ‘respectable’ front, garnering respectable voters, whilst dog-whistling to the less respectable, but it is a strategy with inherent tensions: if the whistle is sent in the wrong register, then the humans can hear it. (This isn’t, by the way, “sneering and name-calling” at those who vote for populist parties, one of several things I was accused of this week in a rather peculiar, unprovoked attack made on me this week. It’s analysis.).

During this breathing space, two things could, and hopefully will, happen. One is that the realities of being in parliament, and claiming an aspiration to govern, will take their toll on Reform. They may find it more difficult to manipulate the House of Commons than they did the European Parliament. Farage is in many ways their greatest asset, but he is notoriously difficult to work with and, to my eye, his narcissism, which is the cause of that, is growing. There are already signs of internal arguments, and there will be greater media scrutiny of their policies, their funding, and the peculiar structure of the party itself. Much also depends on what happens to the Tory Party, of course, something I’ll come to in future posts.

The other, somewhat related, hope is that the combination of energy and unfussy competence which Labour have begun to show this week will continue, and will bear fruit – demonstrably and fairly quickly. Populism likes to define itself as anti-Establishment, anti-elite, anti-Woke, and anti-globalist. But amongst the better ways to define it is as being anti-competence. Competence is the one thing it cannot deliver, and one of the best ways of countering its appeal.

59 comments:

  1. I write as someone who voted twice in New Zealand for PR (the MMP version) and have no regrets about doing so. You are correct in saying that the current UK government gamed the system better than the Conservatives and, given the abject stupidity of almost every Conservative minister, that is no surprise. But the feeling in New Zealand, as I recall, had a fair amount to do with the fundamental illegitimacy of FPTP. There was a feeling that there had to be a fairer, more collegial way forward. And it was adopted. The first referendum chose MMP, and the counter-attack by the FPTP faction was defeated the second time round. The principal objection to FPTP is, however, something that has not been understood clearly in the UK, but can more easily be seen in France and the US. That is the brawling nature of the legislatures that FPTP delivers. Starmer has been careful to avoid triumphalism and has attempted to produce an air of non-ideological pragmatism, and that is hopefully for the better, but it doesn't fundamentally change the ethos.

    I am also of the view, again not seriously touched on (with the possible exception of The Guardian) that Northern Ireland is a major issue that, under the conscientious stewardship of Hilary Benn, will move to the point where NI will vote to detach itself from the UK. The UK as currently defined (GB & NI) will then become GB: an oxymoron if ever there was one. Reducing the Lords to 300 and approaching federalism within the UK is another obvious way of changing the dynamic in the UK. And the German Federal model is an obvious starting point as well.

    These developments won't directly address the economic decline of the UK, but they do offer imaginative solutions to some of the underlying social issues identified by Fintan O'Toole.

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    1. NI might want to detach itself from the U.K., but do you think that the RoI would want it? The Republic has a higher per capita GDP. Would it want to take over the UK’s subsidy? Already there is free trade and travel - do the (southern) Irish need more?

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    2. It's difficult to put the UK's FPTP vote shares into the context of an NZ-style MMP system, mainly because the existence of proportional representation changes the way that people make voting decisions. However, there may some consolation for those worried by the "rise of the populist right". The NZ experience suggests that the numbers of people who vote for the right and left extremes - Green Party on the left, ACT (libertarian/populist/Atlas Network) on the right are pretty consistent, falling between 5 and 15 percent each at most elections. The middle ground is scrapped over by Labour and our Tories (National Party), who will form governments with the parties to the left or right depending on the party vote.
      This works pretty well most of the time, as long as the centre right/left parties call the shots in post election coalition formation. Unfortunately our current government has very weak leadership, and essentially caved in to just about every demand made by its two partners, with the result that they've spent most of the last year implementing policies that only tiny minorities voted for. Bad politics and worse governance, but at least we only have two more years to suffer - no five year terms here.

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    3. “NI might want to detach itself from the U.K., but do you think that the RoI would want it?”
      Unionists in N Ireland see the link to the rest of UK weakening, and reunification with Ireland looming. It seems clear Westminster would cast NI adrift in a heart beat.
      Facing this bleak landscape, their latest argument boils down to “NI is such a basket case – economically, politically and socially – why would Ireland want us?”
      What a desperate reflection on 100 years of Unionist rule. Ireland is already laying the groundwork for reunification, and was a better partner to NI over Brexit than the Tory government.

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  2. Your blog is a regular Friday treat, and this is one of your best - Farage's 'repellent ... gurning chuckle' was particularly delicious. So I hope you won't mind my suggesting that there's a small slip - didn't David Lammy visit Poland, not Portugal, as well as Sweden and Germany?

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    1. Glad you like it. And you are right it was Poland. I knew this, so can't think why I wrote Portugal instead - anyway, it's now corrected. Thanks.

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  3. So hopefully you will find my comment as well written and as thoughtful as this piece is.
    I will state I am a Brexiteer and believe the decision was the right one and far from surprised at the response from the EU in return.
    I watched a video recently that painted the EU in a very poor light from a country that is in the bloc, stating that there are regulations foistered on them that run roughshod over the local culture. So, Im asking you if you could steel-man the Brexit position.
    As I said before, the response from the EU is exactly what I thought it would be - we will be punished by them for leaving and they will be as inflexible as the Chinese are in proclaiming that Taiwan is still part of China.
    I hope to see this addressed in a future blog.

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    1. Farage thinks the nation state is the best way to run things, and so we (based on a slender majority) Brexited. Naturally Europeans are upset - not all British politicians were always diplomatic. But they are meeting soon at Churchill's birthplace, Blenheim Palace as something new called the European Political Community. This is about all the things (border security, energy security ...) that really do need to be sorted out at a continental level and, one hopes, will not weigh heavily on local customs (although some of them, like crated veal, eating songbirds ... are a bit continental - in the UK we saw off a plan to ban our children from smoking pretty smartly the other week, though). We should all (especially Brexiters, Remainers don't need the EPC because they would be happy in the EU as was) get behind the EPC which won't endanger our sovereignty and is needed to smash the gangs and stop the boats, keep the lights on, etc. We (a 'sovereign people' who cannot be bound by some soon to be ancient vote) can have another think about de-Brexiting if/when Rejoin starts to poll at say double stay out. It's only 50 plays 35 at present (I'm not one of those people who thinks 52:48 is decisive and I doubt they'd want us back until we have truly made our mind up). You will be able to judge Farage by his reaction to the EPC, which I hope will be constructive and realistic.

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    2. People complaining about regulation foisted on them are often as badly informed as the many British politicians who claimed that before Brexit.

      Maybe not as badly misinformed as 40 years of myths peddled by the British media had left their population, but the UK is not the only country with a sever lack of education on political processes.

      This lack of knowledge makes it easy for national politics to pursue unpopular agendas while being able to deflect negative responses away from them.

      Again usually not as ruthlessly deployed as by British governments but much to common to not have created and perpetuated misunderstanding in other member nations as well.

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    3. I am a remainer and consider that the decision to leave was very much the wrong one. I would say that Michel Barnier’s conduct of negotiations was exemplary and that the Brexit-U.K. lobby took no account whatsoever of his differences in coralling 27 nations behind him. As for you basic point, just wait. Now that we have a government that is positive about relations with the EU - and even with an insistence on remaining outside it - you will see how little any of this has to do with ‘punishing’ and how much it has to do with the immature attitude imbecility of U.K politicians like Johnson and Frost towards the EU.

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    4. Paul C: Thanks for your kind words, especially since they come from someone who is evidently not in agreement with my view of Brexit. I genuinely appreciate and respect you for that.

      On your points:

      1. It is inevitable that some or many EU regulations will over-ride local cultures, but so what? National regulations long ago did so in most countries with respect to their regions, and whether in or out of the EU most countries have to comply with huge swathes of international regulation. Remember when some Brexiters wanted a ‘WTO Brexit’? How do ‘WTO rules’ respect ‘local cultures’? And, anyway, is there something inherently good about ‘local cultures’? Doesn’t it depend what they are?

      2. The idea that the EU has ‘punished’ the UK for leaving is fatuous. The UK chose to leave, and the terms on which it left were dictated by its own red lines.

      3. There is no comparison whatsoever between the relationship between China/ Taiwan and EU/UK, the most obvious difference being that the EU does not deny the legitimacy of the UK’s existence, or regard it as its territory, or threaten to invade it.

      For all these reasons, no, I will not be addressing the issues you have raised in a future blog. Apart from the fact that they have no merit, it is not my purpose to keep rehashing the arguments for and against leaving, but to chart the consequences of having done so. Thanks again for your comment. Chris

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    5. There is a certain paradox in that if this government is super-competent and -efficient, it will outperform the EU. (Not an issue for the last few appalling administrations). So a form of successful lexit-light would be possible. I guess the policy proposed by Starmer gives us time to assess that. Hard to see that closer co-operation in the short term is a problem though, especially for personal freedoms, and even customs union and single market may not be bad for UK.

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    6. Oh no, it seems the 'punishment' argument is back. I'm afraid the German car industry and 'they need us more than we need them' will follow.

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    7. If Spain wins the final on Sunday it will be punishment for leaving the EU.

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    8. In reply to the @anonymous commentator above who tells us he is a Brexiter and that the EU is punishing us,
      It’s hard to take this comment seriously but if I have learned one thing since 2016 it’s that Brexit was driven by lies about the EU & delusions about the status of the UK.

      After thinking about how to address the contention of anonymous I’ve come to the conclusion that while Brexit had many fathers, the overwhelming message of Leave.org was encapsulated in what Boris Johnson himself said on the stump in 2016: “we can have our cake & eat it because they need us more than we need them”.

      Cake being that the UK could leave the EU and yet continue to have seamless borderless full free trade in both goods & services inside the internal market without being a member and without the responsibilities membership entails.

      Sorry but that was an utter lie. Once the UK left the EU it became a third party and as such the best future trading relationship the UK can have with the EU is a high quality comprehensive fit-for-purpose Free Trade Agreement (FTA) such as for example the Canada-EU CETA.
      This allows for as smooth as possible trade in goods between Canada and the EU with a minimal level of checks at EU Border Control Points. No FTA anywhere allows for free trade in services just goods.

      Canada & the EU negotiated this FTA over a decade and it takes that long because modern trade is full of sets of standards- for example if country A makes cars and wants to sell them in country B then country A will have to prove it’s cars are well made & safe and so in car making there are myriads of sets Of standards about all aspects of the product.

      These standards are effectively barriers to country A selling its cars in country B and are called Non-Tariff-Barriers (NTB’s) and to get around them expert negotiators in all the myriads of sectors in modern trade from both countries meet and thrash out what are called Mutual Equivalence Agreements (MEA’s). These are binding legal agreements by which country B accepts the standards of country A in any specific sector as being equivalent to its own and country A promises not to change its standards. Once you have an MEA then cross border selling is much smoother and importantly there is trust between the two nations.

      The EU-UK Trade & Cooperation Agreement (TCA) is not a comprehensive fit for purpose FTA and instead is a terrible deal full of friction and blocks for UK exporters.

      Why?
      Because the Brexit hard liners had refused to negotiate and sign the myriads of sectoral MEA’s needed’

      Why no MEA’s ?
      Because Brexit hardliners had swallowed their own Coolaid and refused to sign any MEA because they said such a legally binding agreement ties down the freedom of the UK government to change its
      rules, regulations, standards at will and so is a breach of “our sovereignty”.

      Incredibly Lord Frost told Michel Barnier that the EU must just accept’ the UK as a ‘sovereign equal’ and that all UK standards are always equivalent whatever changes are made and that the UK government would never sign any MEA.
      Yeah right - try that one on the Americans for example.

      So the TCA is full of friction and it’s getting worse and it’s nothing to do with the delusion the EU is ‘punishing us’, no, the EU is treating the UK exactly like it treats every other third party.

      However there is light on the horizon in that Labour have understood the problems caused by the hardline Brexiters and wish to negotiate the many needed MEAs to ‘fix’ the TCA and make it nearer to a proper FTA and help UK exports.
      In no way is this reversing Brexit as the right claim it’s merely making it smoother.
      This of course is just one of many negative aspects of Brexit

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  4. Another insightful and excellent blog, thank you.
    I especially appreciated the comprehensive breakdown of the vagaries of the UK electoral system.
    What is clear, after stripping away the euphoria, is that Labour won by a targeted 1.6% swing in their favour (mostly due to the Scottish vote), and the Tories lost by a targeted swing vote in favour of other parties, namely Reform and to a much lesser extent, to the LiDems/Labour.
    The swing to the Reform party is the most worrying, as coupled with the percentage vote share of the Tories, there was a still clear majority of voters who preferred Tory/ Reform candidates, outnumbering the Labour vote share of 33.7% by the combined vote share for Tory/Reform of 38%. Within a FPTP system, where swings are common, the next election could easily go the other way- a Reform victory, based on similar strategies employed by Labour this time around.
    While in no way would I suggest the election was illegitimate, the euphoria, while understandable after 14 years of Tory misrule, needs to be put in perspective.
    This perspective also revolves around the way that the UK has defined itself by Brexit, without defining what Brexit actually means. Whilst a seemingly contradictory statement, it belies the fact that the Labour government under Sir Keir Starmer, is a continuist, Brexit government. That is a fate that the UK gave itself, and will have to live with, probably forever. ‘Making Brexit work’ is also a contradiction in terms, but as modern government is nothing more than mediocre crisis management- it’s the best that Starmer can do. The UK has gone from surviving on the kindness of others, to being a rule taker and a minnow compared to what it once was as a strong leader in the EU.
    Reading Charles Grant shows another very British perspective, that of cherry picking (referring to the above, a futile attempt to define Brexit by ‘making it work’)- one example, how can you have more youth mobility and Erasmus integration if the course and qualifications (and teacher’s qualifications) aren’t mutually recognised by the EU/UK? Why would EU students come to the UK and invest their money and time in a course that needs to be validated back home, and this validation isn’t pan EU? Why then does Mr Grant suggest Sir Keir refrain from asking for mutual recognition of qualifications? This shows how much the compounding opportunity cost of being outside the tent is costing the UK every day, and also a profound lack of understanding of how the Plan Bologna works.
    The reality is that the UK is a third country, it voted to be that all by itself- nobody asked you to leave- and while that might have been a teachable moment, the UK still doesn’t seem to get the message, and nothing that looks like coming out of the Labour government gives a different impression, so far.
    While the new government might appear to be less emotionally engaged and clinically competent, all that it has left with the EU is damage limitation. These vagaries of the UK voting system will give any long term political thinkers in the EU serious cause for concern, as the door is more than open for a more radical conservative government in the UK to double down on the veridiction and provoke even more problems for the EU than it wants to deal with.

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    1. Thanks for your kind words, and I agree with much of your comment. But, on a specific point, or points, does a youth mobility scheme and/or Erasmus+ participation entail MRPQ? I don't think so, although I am happy to be corrected.

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    2. Perhaps not for language studies or secondary school exchanges, but for University level education, how would part of a study period in a non validated country for a EU student make sense without fully mutualised accreditation (of course material and professional instructors), something rejected by Johnson when it was offered? This from the official EU page, "The UK is no longer an EU Member State. It has also opted not to take part as an associated third country in the new Erasmus+ programme 2021-27. The UK will therefore not be taking part in the new programme as a Programme Country. The European Commission regrets this decision by the United Kingdom." They go on to say that the UK's participation is limited by its own choice, and thus the options for UK students to study within the existing framework are greatly reduced. In simple terms, Johnson put ideology before the benefits of the UK/EU students, and withheld participation because the EU body controlling the accreditation would 'dictate' the terms of the UK's participation. Small mindedness and petty, inward thinking to the detriment of all. Brexit in a nutshell. The University sector in the UK is hurting greatly from this frankly bizarre decision, whereas the University sector in the EU, while regretful of the UK's choices, has adjusted and moved on. I'm in year three of waiting for my degrees (3 post graduate UK degrees) to be validated. Come September, I will have to evaluate whether it will be quicker for me to do another PhD here in the EU, or continue waiting. Importantly, having Spanish validation of UK qualifications does not automatically give me validation in any other EU country, which each have their own criteria for third country qualifications (language proficiency being just one of them). There are thousands of cases like me in the EU, which is no consolation, but just proves how stupid the whole situation is.

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    3. Tory/Reform did indeed poll more than Labour, but it was smashed by Labour/Liberal/Green/Nationals. All parties are to some extent broad churches, but the Conservatives have traditionally been better disciplined and have had a more diverse congregation.
      There should be room in the political landscape for more than 1 popular right of center party and hopefully Reform, or a variant it are here to stay. If the Brexit referendum taught us anything it’s that we need to listen to each other more and people need to be heard, not put in a box.

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    4. El Fred - I think you should not be comparing the Reform/Tory combined vote just to the Labour vote, but add the LibDem vote to it. That would make their combined share something like 46%. In many south-east constituencies it was a difficult choice to know which of Labour or LibDem would be best placed to get the Tory incumbent out.

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    5. El Fred: I’m not sure that the two things are the same. MRPQ relates to qualifications needed to undertake a regulated profession, which doesn’t apply to most degrees and doesn’t always relate to degrees at all. So (potentially, I’m not saying this would happen) you could have UK participation in Erasmus without MRPQ or UK-EU MRPQ without participation in Erasmus. (I should stress that MRPQ isn’t a blanket thing – it would likely to occur, if it did, on a profession-by-profession basis.) You might say, if the UK joined Erasmus but had not agreed MRPQ, then what about the ability to practice where a relevant degree is the PQ for a regulated profession? But the situation is just the same. If the degree is awarded by an EU institution (even if part of the time it had been spent in the UK under Erasmus) then it is valid for practice in the EU but, absent of MRPQ, not the UK. If the degree is awarded by a UK institution (even if part of the time it had been spent in the EU under Erasmus) then it is valid for practice in the EU but not the UK.

      I should stress, I’m not making any point here about what is desirable, just suggesting that Grant is not guilty of ‘cherry-picking’ in his proposals.

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    6. Fair point Dr Grey regarding Grant and cherry picking, but in my case, and it may only apply for Spain, I can teach in non regulated universities (say for students from the USA, which I did for years), but until my now 'third country' degrees are validated, I cannot teach within the Spanish university system (which I used to do), either teaching medicine (regulated as a professional qualification) or Philosophy, which is not a regulated professional qualification. In fact, it is illegal for the universities to actually hire me without the legal validation (that's what they told me to my face).
      This varies from EU country to country as the offer of work I had in Italy is no longer possible unless I fully validate my UK degrees in the Italian university system, and so on for each country, as there is no pan EU recognition for third country degrees once validated by one EU country. In short, it's a mess, and while Erasmus + might or might not be affected (to my reading it is but it depends on many factors which the UK chose not to comply with or to comply with fully), the 'market', ie, the students, don't see the value in a degree or part of a degree that isn't valid in their own country without hurdles, nor would be valid in any other EU country without that country's particular validation process.

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    7. Erasmus might or might not be affected depending on the scope of the engagement.

      If you are only doing one or two semesters abroad then you'll probably fine even if there is no MRPQ, but if you were to do master based on a bachelor degree in our own country than this would very likely be different.

      This is one of the changes I've observed between when I was at uni 25 years ago and now.

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    8. Mutual recognition of degrees within the EU is one of those things that is logical but has progressed in fits and starts. It exists in the BeNeLux and the Baltic countries, but outside of those it's varied wildly. The treaties have a basis for it, but much of the hard work still needs to be done.

      I feel your pain: when my mum emigrated many years ago her degree wasn't recognised and was faced with the choice of starting again or doing something different. She chose the latter.

      Your best bet may be finding a university that will accept your prior qualifications to allow you to claim credits for a significant chunk of the course. Then you have a new degree, but this time with EU recognition. Requires some luck obviously.

      Just another example of how politicians just casually disregard the lives of ordinary people. It would be better if they came out and said they hated mutual recognition. But no, they say they think it's a great idea, but refuse to put in any of the work.

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  5. Most polls in the run-up to the election put Labour about 20 percentage points ahead of the Conservatives.
    Yet in the end Labour only finished 10 points ahead of the Conservatives.

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  6. Starmer has doubled down on not rejoining the SM/CU. However 75% of Labour voters want to rejoin the EU. How will he square this ellipse? He must be under tremendous pressure to explain the reasons for his red lines.

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    1. He will certainly come under pressure but I think it is all but inconceivable that we will drop those red lines. Why? Because imagine what it would mean. Immediately, his entire administration would become about nothing other than holding another referendum (which he might not win, shattering his credibility as happened, in reverse, to Cameron) and, if it was won, then apply for and negotiate re-entry, which might well be refused and, even if not, would very likely still be ongoing at the time of the next election, still undelivered. It just wouldn’t make sense. That isn’t an argument against keeping up the pressure, of course, but the earliest realistic expectation for it to bear fruit is the 2029 manifesto (I’m not saying that it is likely, even then, but who knows what things will look like then).

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    2. So that would be single market membersip in the late 2030s. Blimey. You aren't in business are you.

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    3. No, I'm not in business, but I'm more than well aware of how damaging being outside the SM is for businesses, and have written about it endlessly. But that doesn't change the political realities.

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    4. This is dreadful.

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    5. I believe what is dreadful is the lack of movement on getting the UK back into the EU/single market - But this is something that many in the UK simply do not understand, even if re-join had been Labour's flagship policy, the EU would say no, and will continue to say no as long as the Tories credibly can form a government (and are in favor of Brexit).
      As long as those two things are true, the UK cannot re-join the EU - So either the Tories collapse in on themselves and the LibDems take over as the main right wing party, or the PM who can take the UK back into the EU is a Tory one.
      And that remains the case no matter the economic damage Brexit has and continues to do.

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    6. I totally take your point Chris, but what was Starmer doing saying what he did when he knows what Labour supporters and voters think about Brexit. He's now painted himself into a corner, just like Big Dave did before the referendum vote when he said 'we'll implement whatever you decide'.

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  7. There is a clear mandate for Labour to repair the damage and dishonesty created in EU relations over the past years. And regarding Farage and his tiny loony tunes, they can bang and shout as much as they want, they are never going to be near power.

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    1. By the looks of it they aren't going to for about a decade.

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  8. I think the new Govt may bring in SPS alignment, stating current problems, the desire in many sectors for action to make things easier, and describing SPS in some pragmatic, easily digested formulation

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    1. An SPS agreement will not fix very much.
      We are stuck for about ten years because this government don't like the single market or customs.

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    2. An SPS agreement would fix what it would fix - reduced border frictions for livestock, produce, flowers, seeds etc. It's not huge, but it's not negligible - at least for businesses in those sectors and their consumers.

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    3. "We are stuck for about ten years because this government don't like the single market or customs."

      This isn't really true, and even if true, doesn't matter - The biggest impediment to any movement is not labour, but the Tories. As long as they can get into Power the EU isn't interested in the sort of complext agreements like Single market/Rejoin/Customs union.

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    4. This is an oft stated view, but I am not aware of any key EU figures who have said this. The Conservative party would have to campaign on a specific Brexit mark 2 platform - with all the inevitable associated economic downsides and even further tax rises ! Or they would have to promise yet a further referendum - which they would be highly unlikely to win, with demographics working against them all the time.
      No major economic debate is ever fully settled, but Brexit failure is almost as settled as you can get. You only need to look at the reaction of the city and the steady rise in sterling and domestic Ftse 250 index since the election - which can only reflect the reality of Brexit being slowly but inevitably unwound.

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    5. I think if the Labour party offered a time-limited dynamic SPS agreement (say 5 years) with the possibility of extension I think the EU would go for it. This could be much more flexible since if the EU felt the UK wasn't upholding their part you'd have a maximum of 5 years before it could be ditched. And the costs of that are for the UK much higher than for the EU.

      The SM is harder since you can't be "half-in", it's all or nothing. A CU is possible, the EU has a partial CU with Turkey (basically excluding agriculture), though whether it's beneficial for Turkey I don't know.

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    6. Martijn: I think that's right, not least as a time-limited dynamic SPS deal was actually offered by the EU at one stage. Admittedly, that was in the context of the disputes over the NIP, which ended with the Windsor Framework, so the circumstances have changed but, still, it's not unreasonable to think it could be a runner now.

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  9. The EU will not let itself be placed in a conversation of substance on a 27:1 basis that places the UK as being equivalent to the EU. And Labour under Starmer have needlessly boxed themselves - and the whole of the UK - into the impossible "make Brexit work" corner previously reserved for wing nuts, not ordinarily to be entered by the sensible. Therefore whilst EU mood music may change, and insubstantial EU-UK talking shops may proliferate, nothing of substance will be done. A few fig leaves may get strewn about, nothing more. This will be as true in defence and security as any other area.

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  10. The complaints from the right about the election result remind me of the complaints about Gordon Brown being an 'unelected Prime Minister.' I don't remember the right making the same complaints about Johnson when he replaced May, or Truss when she replaced him, or Sunak when he replaced her (did I blink and miss a Tory prime minister or two?). They had a huge majority and could have changed the electoral system if they wanted to (we had a referendum about it in the Cameron years, for heaven's sake, for a system that, conveniently, no one really wanted ...)

    I suspect that the underlying grievance is that the two party system is breaking down. First Past the Post represents two parties fairly well. With three or four, things become non-linear and a bit chaotic, as we know from Scottish Westminster results in recent years. That was fine for the right when it was the liberal-left vote that was split. They are not so happy when the Tories leach votes to Reform and to the Lib Dems. Sour grapes! (Though Labour too are losing votes to the radical right. Didn't matter this time, but maybe in the future it will - which confirms your point about the continuing danger of populism...)

    A J Paxton

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    1. I don't think there is any perfect system. If you want representation for particular places or areas, then there will always be issues with not all parties being represented to "their share of the vote". If you don't represent places then people come to parliament representing party but no particular people. (Having an MP you can appeal to is actually something people do like and can at times be useful.) In Australia, federally we have a preferential voting system for geographic seats, which makes it easier to vote for smaller parties and still get a significant vote (basically the least disliked person/party gets elected). The Australian Labor Party won the 2022 federal election on a first preference vote of about 33%, but on a two party preferred vote of 52% in 2022. The Liberal (read conservative) Party had a higher first preference vote (35%) but had annoyed a lot of people with climate denialism and culture wars.

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    2. I've always found the idea of being able to call a local MP for a personal problem to be a bit bizarre: if that works the system has already failed IMO. They really shouldn't be able to arrange anything you can't do yourself.

      When you vote for a party in some form of MMR, then the people are representing you, you voted for them after all. Especially with an open-list. The only difference is that the person representing you doesn't necessarily live near you. That's not a problem though, we have internet these days and I regularly deal with people who don't live near me. What matters is whether they're doing their job, not where they live.

      Australia's preferential voting system is better, but much of the actual interesting debate happens in the Senate because the government doesn't have a majority there because, wait for it, they use a form of MMR.

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    3. 'I've always found the idea of being able to call a local MP for a personal problem to be a bit bizarre: if that works the system has already failed IMO. They really shouldn't be able to arrange anything you can't do yourself.'

      On the basis of my own experience working for a short time in an MP's office and also working for a much longer time inside bureaucracies, I suggest that a lot of people have little or no understanding of how bureaucracies work. Lots of people have little or no understanding of how IT works and as a result can easily find themselves in a position to benefit from the assistances of people who do understand how IT works; why should it be any different with bureaucracies?

      J-D

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  11. "Labour sought, and gained, smaller majorities but in more constituencies"

    Not majorities, pluralities. Yes, of course the victory is legitimate by the rules of the current electoral system of the UK. But it still isn't a strong mandate to get a mere 1/3 of the votes, on disappointing voter turnout, and win a majority largely because the other side was unusually bad at tactical voting. Also, in a proportional representation, ranked choice, or multi-member constituency system, the Greens would immediately take a decent chunk out of the current Labour vote.

    What gets me is not the claim that they have a mandate to govern - under the silly rules that exist, yes, they formally have that mandate. What gets me is how UK elections are discussed by many people. The general tendency is to consider only the seats without considering how voters voted, and to downplay or ignore the absurdity of the electoral system. Corbyn is called a loon who doomed the party to defeat while getting a mere 1.7% less in 2019 than Starmer did now, considerably more % in 2017, and massively more actual votes in both elections. Similarly, if Starmer substantially increases the Labour vote share to 38% in 2029, he could still be routed in terms of seats, and the other side end up with an enormous majority, if the Tories and whatever Reform UK will be called that year coordinate well, which is out of his control. This is very much like rolling the dice and then calling a party leader a failure or a brilliant strategist depending on whether you got a one or a six.

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    1. Pluralities (in most cases), yes, you’re right – my mistake. But I think your comparison of the Starmer and Corbyn vote shares is wide of the mark. Sure, the overall vote share figures aren’t much different, but the distribution of those votes is very different, reflecting the fact that Corbyn couldn’t appeal to the wider spread of constituencies that Starmer could. Moreover, the willingness of voters to vote tactically for, especially LibDems, rather than stay with the Tories is in large part to do with them not fearing a Starmer Labour victory in the way they had a feared a Corbyn victory. So, yes, Starmer had a better strategy for winning than Corbyn, regardless of the closeness of the vote share figure. (As for raw vote numbers, the issues there are a) turnout and b) again, willingness of voters to vote tactically).

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  12. As always, it is such a pleasure to read the Friday blog, so trenchant, full of insight and sound judgement. I hope that you will soon address the complex and crucial question of alignment; does Starmer's very red line on free movement/SM/CU mean that it would be irrational to have a long-term policy of aligning regulatory regimes, with the inevitability that UK will become progressively more unaligned.
    On PR/FPTP could I make a crude realpolitik point that was probably too simple to rate a mention in your analysis? The fact is that any party that is in a strong position to govern alone will find it very hard to promote PR because it is axiomatic that it would lose a large number of its own MPs. A pitch towards PR is therefore only likely to happen when no single party can govern alone, and is reliant on support or a coalition arrangement with a smaller party dedicated to PR. This is, of course, what we saw with the Cameron/Clegg coalition, though in that case Cameron led Clegg by the nose and insisted on the referendum proposition being the single transferable vote model, which is a non-proportional majoritarian scheme for which few save the hapless Clegg had a moment's time for.
    With the old two-party settlement weakening, it is quite impossible to predict how all this may develop. But we should not lose sight of the obvious fact that a party that has successfully negotiated the FPTP model will have a huge incentive not to destroy it, since it would mean persuading large numbers of its own MPs to vote for terminating their careers.

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    1. This is, approximately, what happened in the Netherlands. We had a district system until 1918 but for ~60 years it hadn't been returning a majority for any single party (it was split Catholics/Protestants/Liberals) and politicians were complaining about how "their" voters in other parts of the country were be disenfranchised. There were a lot of other things going on of course: WW1 where we were neutral, populism (though for achieving universal suffrage), the "school struggle" about the separation of church and state and more.

      Until people in the UK start taking the disenfranchisement FPTP causes seriously I don't think much will change. I just hope it doesn't require 60 years of minority governments to happen.

      FWIW, I think the UK alternative vote referendum was a missed opportunity and that too many people made perfect the enemy of good. It would have completely changed the dynamic and at least largely solved the disenfranchisement problem where almost all the Reform votes are basically wasted (i.e. they are being ignored which is exactly the platform they're running on). The chance of switching to some form of MMR voting is much higher under AV than FPTP. But that's water under the bridge now.

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    2. Anthony. Thanks, and yes you're right, of course.

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  13. Writing as a French commenter. I'm skeptical about the EU letting the UK rejoin unless it agrees to switch the euro and join Schengen. Do you see this happening? I don't. But more pragmatically, a Norway-type deal might be doable, but as you know, it means becoming a rule-taker. Do you think that is more likely?

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    1. I think Euro and Schengen membership are red herrings.

      Neither of those is automatic but requires considerable effort on part of any new member to match the eligibility criteria.

      Additionally both propositions will have to be evaluated in the circumstances of whenever joining arrives on the agenda.

      For example the value of Schengen membership will already increase quite significantly when the new biometric requirements come into force over the next year.

      The Britons might be uniquely fond of showing their papers when leaving and re-entering their country but increasing wait times and potential difficulties might make some of them want to have the same hassle-free travel experience other Europeans enjoy.

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    2. Agreed that the euro is a complete red herring. Sterling is a stable currency, and the UK (lest we forget) is a relatively stable and long established democracy. The EU have never had a problem with sterling in the past, and there is no reason to expect this to change.

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  14. The sad truth is that Starmer doesn't really have a mandate to do anything much except be more competent: an improvement not to be sneezed at, but nevertheless of little strategic importance. He is now at the mercy of events - will the UK economy grow significantly? Will Ukraine win the war? Will trump cause devastation all Around?

    Events have a way of making even competence largely irrelevant. The bottom line is will Britain prosper or decline, and no excuses like Brexit will be accepted if the latter. The populists will see to that.

    The EU is done with the UK for a generation at least and Northern Ireland will remain an irritant for all. It is only when a future government charts out a new strategic direction for Britain that things will change. In the meantime it is a case of kicking your wounds and feeling sorry for yourself.

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  15. If you want to rejoin the EU at some point, or even the Single Market, you need a campaign in favour of European Freedom of Movement that pushes back against the myths about the harms of FoM that have been circulated over the last 20 years.

    The EU is not going to allow UK membership of the Single Market without acceptance by the UK of the Four Freedoms, that is freedom of movement of goods/services/capital/labour. The problem for the UK is not just that the Tories might come back; the problem is that very few politicians in the UK are willing to defend FoM. The present leadership of the Labour Party is not going to defend FoM because they believe that they have won the election by telling voters in the constituencies that they have won that ending FoM was a good thing. Note this very over-the-top attack on FoM by Rachel Reeves just after the referendum.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/rachel-reeves-brexit-immigration-labour-mp-riots-uk-conference-speech-a7334266.html

    She has also spent the last four years telling people in the north of England that it is good that FoM has ended. Of course it is a myth that ending FoM has been a good thing - it has happened due to exiting the Single Market (which is not a good thing) and the drawbacks of FoM have been greatly exaggerated. Politicians aren't going to expend political capital by pushing back against those myths, especially when they think that they have won an election by playing on those myths.

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  16. As per usual Chris an excellent post. There is one point where I disagree with you. It is when you describe Reform as the first populist party in the UK with ambitions to govern. Looking at it from outside (I live in Ireland) I think Reform is the second populist party. A previous one won the election in 2019.

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  17. Whenever the issue of PR comes up it seems to me the critical point, unlike during the last referendum, the electorate were not given a real opportunity to choose the PR system they wanted. of course this would require a deal of education but it seems to me this makes the case strongly for Citizen's Assembly (CA). If CA can used successfully in Ireland to educate and deliver an informed firm recommendation on Abortion, choosing which PR system to use would be a perfect brief, best kept out of the hands of politicians who gain from the status quo. WHILST I'M AT IT: how about reforming to House of Lords to make it a permanent facility for Citizen's Assemblies (The House of Assembly) fundamental issues are deliberated by the electorate chosen each time as per jury service? The attendees at an assembly could then be given titles such as Lord/Lady or knighthoods, based for once on recognition that they participated in something of value to society!

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