Friday, 7 February 2025

Trump’s new world chaos offers possibilities for post-Brexit Britain

Last week, if anyone can remember that far back, the fifth anniversary of the UK leaving the EU provoked a welter of comment and detailed analysis from which it is hard to escape the conclusion that what I’ve sometimes called ‘the battle for the post-Brexit narrative’ is over. The public view that it was wrong to leave and that leaving has not been a success is entrenched and growing. The bulk of sensible and serious commentary, both in the UK (£) and abroad, endorses that.

Meanwhile, Brexit’s remaining defenders, such as Boris Johnson (£) and Nigel Farage, can only wail about the need to “believe” in Brexit, and the benefits they claim for it range from trivialities to demonstrable lies, the most frequent and most egregious being that it enabled an early Covid vaccine rollout. The very weakness of that defence, combined with the notable absence of celebration of the anniversary, show the abject failure of Brexit to deliver the promises made for it by its advocates.

The core problem in current British politics is that the Brexiters are too shameless to admit this failure, and utterly resistant to even the most modest attempts to address the consequences. Since, public opinion notwithstanding, this stance is baked in to both the Reform and Tory parties, and large and noisy section of the media, Brexit Britain is, as I wrote in my previous post, stuck. Like squatters, having trashed the house, they will neither get out nor allow the owners to repair it.

Thus a reversal of Brexit is politically unrealistic in any immediate timescale, and the government’s promised ‘reset’ is the only game in town. Yet even that has been pursued with frustrating timidity and slowness, not least because of the opposition of the Brexit wreckers.

However, in what has been a tumultuous two weeks, there are at least signs of the reset being pursued with more urgency and a little more resolve. Perhaps more importantly, the tumult, which derives from Donald Trump’s return to power, depressing and disorientating as it is, could present an opportunity to finally break out of the stale circles of the Brexit debate.

Reset: a new urgency?

It’s hard to deny that, even though these events were already planned, Trump’s explosive arrival in the White House put new meaning upon Starmer’s attendance at a meeting of EU leaders, to discuss defence and security issues, and the meeting next day of the EU-UK Forum, where EU Relations Minister Nick Thomas-Symonds delivered a major speech. At all events, although it was scarcely the first time that Starmer has talked about wanting an “ambitious” security partnership and reset with the EU, it was the first time that he and Thomas-Symonds set out a desire to agree a reset deal within the next three months.

It’s not clear how realistic this is, since the related announcement of a UK-EU summit to be held in May would imply that negotiations be completed in advance of this. Nevertheless, both the summit itself, which will be hosted by the UK, and the identification of a timetable, can be read as recognizing the need to deliver, and deliver quickly, on a reset which, so far, has mainly consisted of warm words.

Thomas-Symonds also spoke of the need to approach the reset with “ruthless pragmatism” in place of “ideologically-driven division”. Quite what this means is also unclear. Hopefully, it is a signal to British Brexiters (£) that the government is willing to take on their backlash against the reset, which I discussed in a recent post and which has been much on display in utterly ludicrous attacks on this week’s meetings in the pro-Brexit press*. If that is so, then it would be helpful for Thomas-Symonds, or Starmer himself, to give a big, uncompromising, and full-throated speech demolishing those attacks and advocating, with enthusiasm, a detailed agenda for the government’s still far too vague ‘ambition’. If not now, when?

Less optimistically, it might have been (or have also been) a signal to the EU that the government still clings to the familiar Brexiter line that Brussels should be more ‘flexible’ and less ‘ideological’ in its application of rules for third countries. That line is still, at least implicitly, what Farage believes would “improve” the existing deal, as if post-Brexit ‘red tape’ were an EU imposition rather than an inevitable consequence of decisions taken by UK and urged by Farage himself. I’m only guessing, but it seems to me at least possible that there are still people in the civil service and the cabinet who have the same view, if only because, even after all these years, there is still so much ignorance about how the EU works and what Brexit means.

But even the most optimistic reading of these developments (i.e. that Starmer intends to stand up to the Brexiters and to work realistically and rapidly to agree the most maximalist version of the reset), for all that it would mark a shift in gear compared with the last eight months, already seems inadequate to the scale and pace of events. For, based even on the short period since Trump returned to office, there is a good case for thinking that the fundamental recalibration of global politics, which I foreshadowed in a post in November, is now unfolding in plain view.

Trump’s global coup

That recalibration isn’t only, or even primarily, about Trump’s trade tariffs, which I’ll come back to. There is already a long list of other developments, including the pardoning of the J6 rioters; the forced deportations (with the associated bullying of Colombia and the planned re-opening and re-purposing of Guantanamo Bay); the quite extraordinary handing of access to government finance systems to Musk; the hounding of Federal agencies including the FBI; the attempts to suborn the CIA; the freezing of foreign aid; the purge of all forms of diversity initiatives; the bullying territorial claims made on Panama, Greenland and Canada; the grotesque and yet absurd proposal to “take over” Palestine and create a “Riviera of the Middle East”; the withdrawal from the Paris Accord and the World Health Organization.

That is only a partial list of what has happened so far, and there will undoubtedly be more to come, probably even as I am writing. But it is enough to eviscerate any lingering idea that Trump will show even the restraints of his first presidency. It may be chaotic, but is also a coup of sorts, and arguably an assault on the constitution. Under Trump, the US has launched a global attack on liberalism in its most general meaning, and on many of its specific attributes at home and abroad.

Even acknowledging that many of Trump’s announcements and executive orders are merely performative, that much of what he does will be heavily resisted, that his administration is likely to be characterized by incompetence and infighting, will not last forever, and may become domestically unpopular, it seems certain that the US will be permanently changed and, as a result, so will the rest of the world. Apart from anything else, it shouldn’t be forgotten that Trump is, in fact, doing what he promised he would do, and was given a clear endorsement for it by US voters. So, even if some of those who did so turn against him, it really can’t be denied that there is a deep groundswell of desire for the US to be a very different kind of country to that which, at least, the UK has known, or believed it has known, since, say, 1941. (I realise there is a lot that can be debated in and around that claim.)

Trump’s tariff weapon

When it comes to Trump’s new tariffs, these can be seen as an attack on economic liberalism, and to an extent they are motivated by economic protectionism. But they are not really, or at least not simply, about waging trade wars (although trade wars with China and the EU may be the result). More fundamentally, Trump is using trade as a weapon to intimidate other countries into doing his bidding in both economic and non-economic matters. The non-economic motive was most evident in the threat to Colombia, but was also present in those made to Mexico and Canada, and carried through against China.

The fact that Mexico and Canada struck last-minute deals on border protection to avoid the tariff attacks is in part an illustration of this, but it is also an irrelevance. For one thing, they are only temporary deals, and there is every reason to believe that, like a blackmailer, Trump will come back for more (and, even if he doesn’t, this episode will have done long-term damage to, for example, US-Canada relations). For another, the very rapidity of the reprieves is all of a piece with Trump’s almost cliched desire to ‘do the unexpected’ as a weapon designed to de-stabilize his perceived enemies. Indeed, as legal commentator David Allen Green has pointed out this week, although Trump is often described as ‘transactional’, his approach to deal-making is actually “anti-transactional”, so that “an agreement offers an opportunity to gain leverage, for a new negotiation, for a new exertion of power.”

However, whilst what is happening may be inflected through Trump’s baroque psychology (£), it is not reducible to that. He is both an expression of, and a vehicle for, a deep seam of sentiment in the US which sees the country as the put-upon victim of the international order (despite that order being largely the creation of the US). In that sense, Trump’s tariff attacks are part of the wider picture of a regime determined to use force to dismantle the constraints of law and convention abroad quite as much as those within the domestic sphere. That he has even spoken of the use of military force, extending to the sequestration of territory, against some of the US’s own allies means that, at the most basic level, the US can no longer be trusted by any of its allies.

Trump’s words and actions have therefore already fractured global society. It’s tempting to reach for historical analogies, which might range from Hoover’s Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, to the America First Committee, to the endless debates about whether Trump is a fascist. But they really aren’t necessary. It’s enough to observe that he is what he is, now; doing what he is doing, now. Perhaps in the future it may seem an overblown claim but, just at the moment, it is plausible to say that we are seeing the beginning of a new global divide between rules and brute force. It is also not necessary to romanticize ‘the rules-based international order’, or to sanitize the history of US foreign policy, to see this as a momentous and highly dangerous development, with the potential to shatter previous alliances and enforce more-or-less binary choices on almost every country in the world.

What of Brexit Britain?

If this analysis, or anything like it, is correct, then the issues it poses for the UK, specifically, go well beyond those of UK-EU relations, although they encompass those relations, and beyond those of tariffs. Thus most current discussions, which focus on Britain having to navigate a careful path in the event of a US-EU trade war, don’t fully address what is at stake. It is not even as simple as picking a side between the US and the EU. It is about picking a side between liberalism and illiberalism (or worse).

This would have created profound problems for the UK even without Brexit, given the role it had roughly established for itself as a ‘transatlantic bridge’. But EU membership would have half-addressed those problems, anchoring one end of the bridge even as the other imploded. As it is, the combination of Brexit and Trump 2.0 has burnt both ends. This poses questions about UK-EU relations, of course, but Trump hasn’t simply turned on the EU. In some ways, the bigger issue his presidency has raised for the UK is illustrated by his assault on Canada, not just with tariffs but with the extraordinary suggestion that it might “cease to exist” as an independent country and could become “America’s 51st State”.

This, then, is an attack on one of Britain’s closest and most longstanding allies, and, indeed, a country of which the British monarch is still the Head of State. The UK-Canada relationship is also, let us not forget, a prime example of the kind of ‘old friendship’ which the Brexiters claimed would be rekindled by leaving the EU. Some even continue to fantasise about ‘CANZUK’ and ‘the Anglosphere’. Moreover, Canada’s relationship with the EU was constantly held up as the template for what Britain’s should become.

In this sense, Trump’s hostility to Canada, quite as much as his hostility to the EU, presents a moment of choice. What, now, should Britain do? Keep quiet? Seek to ‘navigate’ a path to spare itself Trump’s disfavour whilst its ‘old friend’ takes its chances? Indeed one might ask what Farage, the man who always claims to stick to his principles, to care deeply about national sovereignty, and to have a hot-line to Trump, had to say about Canada this last week or so. The answer, so far as I can find, is nothing.

Similar questions apply not just to the UK’s relations with the EU, generally, but to those with Denmark, in particular, and with Greenland. They also apply, in a different way, to its relations with China, which Starmer’s government has recently tried to reset. And they also apply, again in different ways, to its relations with global institutions. To put all this a different way, the vision of, at least, the global Brexiters was of being ‘freed from the shackles of the EU’ in order to participate fully in a global order, including but not limited to a global trade order, an order to which the US now is wholly opposed and bent on destroying. Even the Brexiters’ more limited notion of the Anglosphere was predicated on the US as a bulwark of the ‘rules-based’ order. Equally, they looked to NATO as the sole international basis of UK defence and security, an approach which now looks increasingly precarious. So even if there had ever been a geo-political logic to Brexit, which there wasn’t, the entire basis of that logic is now rapidly disappearing.

A UK-US deal?

To the extent that the Brexiters have any response to this situation, it is the idea of the UK creating a Free Trade Agreement with the US (and/or an exemption from new punishment tariffs). Indeed, some clearly imagine that this, finally, will be a concrete demonstration of the benefits of Brexit.

However, it is an utterly inadequate response. Although there is no doubt that Trump will dangle this possibility in front of Starmer, that doesn’t mean he will do such a deal. In fact, as is already beginning to happen, he is likely to alternately hint that he is going to spare Britain or that he is going to punish us, just as a way of demonstrating his power. But even if he does a deal, his protectionism and nationalism, not to mention his own concept of deal-making, will mean that it will not be a good deal for the UK, and will come with numerous conditions. In any case, as Mexico and Canada are finding as regards USCMA, a deal with Trump is not worth the paper it is written on. His “anti-transactionalism” means he is always liable to make some new demands for obedience from the UK.

Most importantly of all, were a US-UK trade deal to happen in the new context Trump has created it would, for what at best would be only a small economic benefit, engender not just dismay but disgust from most of Britain’s friends and allies. Brexit Britain would cease to be regarded by them, as it has been since 2016, with bewilderment and even sympathy, but instead with loathing and revulsion, a Quisling in Trump’s global war.

The very idea that Brexiters like David Frost should think that their project is justified by the ‘freedom’ to act in such a cowardly and contemptible way shows the depths and desperation they have reached. Certainly their advocacy of dancing a humiliating jig to the tune of a capricious bully removes any vestigial illusion that they are in any way patriotic.

Starmer’s opportunity

The temptation for Starmer, partly as a matter of temperament, but partly because Brexit has left Britain in such an enfeebled position, will be to go on doing nothing and saying little other than platitudes. But inaction and quietude will amount to taking sides or, even worse, will be seen by each side as taking that of the other. Likewise, it will not silence the Brexiter call for doing a deal with the US, with Farage and his acolytes acting as Trump’s Fifth Column in British politics.

Conversely, Starmer has a real opportunity to exert leadership, and in the process has been gifted an opportunity to release Britain from the drift and dither to which it has been consigned by Brexit. He could, in one bound, position the UK as an international beacon of probity, as a strong regional partner, and perhaps even as a galvanizing convenor of medium-sized and small powers, and in the process marginalize Farage as an unpatriotic scoundrel. Similarly, resistance to closer EU ties from the Conservatives and their media supporters could be positioned as undermining Britain’s staunch support for its allies. Doing so would go with the grain of public opinion. Trump and his side-kick Musk are not popular in the UK. Equally, there is public support for closer relations with the EU rather than with the US, and probably (though I haven’t found polling data) for siding with Canada, Greenland/ Denmark, and perhaps even Panama, against Trump’s aggression.

In this way, all the talk still coming from Badenoch, amongst others, of ‘honouring the will of the British people’ and ‘retaining our hard-won Brexit freedoms’ as a reason to oppose the reset could at a stroke be derided as the tired repetition of long-outdated slogans, wrenching political discourse free of the detritus of 2016 and its aftermath. That wouldn’t imply re-opening the Brexit question, or crossing Labour’s ‘red lines’, but it would imply pursuing a maximalist reset with the EU, at speed, and with open enthusiasm rather than coyness and reluctance. Doing so would not just reset UK-EU relations, it would also reset UK international relations generally and, perhaps most importantly, reset the terms of domestic political debate.

Starmer may never have a better chance than now, and, if he is to take it, then the sooner the better if he is to get kudos for being at the forefront of this new global divide. Standing up to Trump in this way would not be easy or cost-free for Britain. Doing so would have significant security and economic ramifications. But the same is true of not doing so. And it’s even possible, given Trump’s bullying temperament, that standing up to him might earn Starmer a degree of grudging respect.

In some ways, Starmer is ideally placed to take this kind of stance. As I wrote recently, his persona and politics are very clearly aligned with the principles of ‘rational-legal authority’ in both the domestic and international spheres, placing him in direct contrast to Trump’s ‘anti-ruleism’. However, at the same time, and relatedly, he is almost preternaturally cautious, lacking vision and perhaps distrustful of the very concept of vision, and as a result inclined to ‘wait and see’ and to dodge hard choices. Hence his current rejection of the bare idea that there is a choice to be made between the US and the EU. That is misguided even if the choice is framed in that way. It is even more misguided when the choice is framed, as it should be, between accepting or rejecting Trump’s new barbarism.

 

*Of these attacks, probably none was more ludicrous than that of Kate Hoey. It isn’t only that she sees betrayal in the UK Prime Minister meeting EU leaders, it is that having campaigned for years against membership of the EU because of its supra-national powers she now proposes that the UK need not deal with the EU at all, but simply with its individual members. And this is only one aspect of the idiocy on display in just this short clip.

46 comments:

  1. This is a truly excellent analysis of the current situation. The UK should grasp the opportunity to strengthen its ties with the EU and assume more of a leadership role in the world. Unfortunately, I fear you are right about Starmer. His caution, lack of vision and in particular his seeming inability to take on the Brexiters are worrying. It’s good news that Sir Ed Davey has taken a clear position. Maybe others will feel emboldened to follow him.

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  2. Hello from an Italian reader.
    The news about how Trump and Musk are creating a Nazi oligarchy is worrying. Italy alone could only bend like Columbia, but fortunately we are part of a union that together is as strong as the USA. I wish your government the right choices because it will soon find itself in a situation where the USA and the EU are mutually exclusive from trade and defence agreements.

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    1. Throwing away more than three quarters of a century of U.K. foreign policy, which dumping the 'special relationship' with the US would do, would have repercussions which would last for a generation, or probably longer, and would likely expose Starmer to vicious attacks from the anti-Labour media. Treating the USA as a potential threat, instead of as a close ally, would probably result in retaliatory measures, causing damage to the U.K.'s economy, for which Labour would be blamed by the same media. Given Trump's childish, thin-skinned nature, he would likely take such a rejection by the UK as a personal slight, increasing the likelihood of retaliatory measures against the UK (Trump's ego is so fragile that he really hates feeling like a loser, and will do anything to avoid it, regardless of the consequences for either country.

      Starmer has to walk a tightrope here. And, for the record, after the selfish impulsiveness of Boris Johnson, I quite like having a cautious PM for a change.

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    2. Anonymous, as a Pole, I'm fairly sure that that's exactly what people were saying about Hitler, back in the day. I think you're correct about what will happen. Sadly, whether it will be the right thing to do - appeasing a bully with imperial ambitions - remains to be seen. We are a gnat in his estimate, and will be crushed without a second thought.

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    3. Ultimately the goal of all those who seek to dismantle the EU is, and has always been, a situation in which each European country needs to fend for its own.

      If even a large country (by European standards) like Italy could be coerced, it would be much worse for all the smaller ones.

      For example a lot of the Brexit promises hinged on it leading to the EU's destruction (or dissolution).
      "We hold all the cards" or "easiest deal in history" required that the UK would negotiate with each European country individually.

      Essentially only requiring actual negotiations with countries of similar size (Germany, France, Italy) and forcing all the others into one-sided "agreements".

      Given the adversarial approach of the new US government, it is even more important to not let that happen

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  3. You say "it shouldn’t be forgotten that Trump is, in fact, doing what he promised he would do, and a majority of US voters endorsed it."

    No, they didn't. Trump's share of the popular vote was 49.8% in the November 2024 election. The majority of American voters did not endorse him.

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    1. Thanks for the correction. I have amended accordingly. But I don't think it affects the basic point - he was the clear winner of the election.

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    2. The majority of Americans may not have ‘endorsed’ Trump by voting for him, but the vast majority did endorse him as either their preferred candidate or a candidate they thought ‘no worse’ than the alternatives, by their refusal to vote for the only viable candidate that could prevent his election. 37% of eligible voters didn’t vote. But in a democracy, ‘not voting’ is as much an action as ‘voting’. This particularly applies to those voters who voted for Biden in 2020 but abandoned Harris in 2024. Whatever their problem with Harris, Trump was never the solution. But by their action they chose him, many because of their perception of Biden’s support for Israel & lack of support for the Palestinians. I wonder how they’re feeling now?

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    3. Not the majority of Voters, but the majority that voted. It was 38% did not vote, 32% Trump 30% Harris.

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  4. A good summary would be:
    "An EU official told me last week that Starmer’s most significant victory on the reset so far was the fact that people believed it existed.", Luke McGee
    https://substack.com/@lukemcgee/note/c-91186721

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  5. All makes sense. Starmer needs to do *something* at least a little bit flashy. Otherwise the Brexit wreckers continue to win.

    Lovely to hear Gullis & other Brexit headbangers are still unemployed & unemployable due to their actions whilst in power.

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    1. No respectable boardroom is going to want any Brexiteers, not least because of the crucial 30-45 demographic.
      Contrary to popular belief, there aren't any Brexit "winners", and there was never any right wing master plan. It's just an evolving and compounding mistake - which might also partly explain why it's so difficult to unpick.

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  6. Interestingly, the reaction of Canada and Mexico to Trump has been characterised as “The Art of the U-Turn”. The proclaimed reasons for Trump’s 30-day pause in tariffs turn out to be things that the two target countries were already doing or had committed to do. In other words, Trump’s threats have achieved nothing. Of course, it is not in the interests of either Canada or Mexico to publish this.😁

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  7. I really wish that there was even the faintest chance that Starmer will take this opportunity. As you point out, it is an absolute open goal and would rescue his failing government and the UK. But he has thrown away his historic majority win, has bungled his policies, and seems to be confirming all the right wing criticisms of his (absent) leadership. How sad that an almost certainly decent man, leading a party which believes it is for everybody, not just the wealthy, seems to be confirming that socialism just isn’t for the British.

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  8. Surprised that you didn’t specially mention the series of articles in the DT from “experts” on how to make a success of Brexit. One thing that Brexit has achieved is to make it possible for third rate nonentities to be given a public megaphone, and to broadcast monumental stupidities without any apparent embarrassment: Hannan, Frost, Hoey, et al. I wonder how they accommodate the need to make Brexit a success after 6 years, with their belief that Brexit was/is a good idea?

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    1. I would have done, but with so much else happening (and such a long post) I really didn't think it was worth making it even longer by going through all their nonsense. But maybe I should have at least mentioned it, so thanks for flagging it here.

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    2. I forgot to mention what a brilliant post this is, and how much I (and probably we all) appreciate the amount of time and effort you put into writing this blog. I’m sure there’s another book in there.

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  9. With regard to Kate Hoey, everything she says and does is through a prism of her ultra Northern Ireland Unionist outlook. She is fully allied to the TUV and Jim Allister - 'No Sea Border', and campaigned for Leave on the DUP/TUV unionist terms - that leaving the EU will solidify the Irish border and 'make Northern Ireland more British'. That's worked out really well hasn't it!!

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    1. She’s basically the Unity Mitford of Brexhit

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  10. "It would be helpful for Thomas-Symonds, or Starmer himself, give a ..... detailed agenda for the government’s still far too vague ‘ambition’. If not now, when?"

    The "when" will happen after agreement is reached with the EU under the EU–UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA).

    "There are also other review clauses in the TCA providing for separate reviews of specific provisions. These include provisions providing for a separate review of the trade heading in Part Two of the Agreement, which could take place from 2025 onwards if either the UK or EU request such a review." (House of Commons Library)

    I expect that Prime Minister Starmer will announce what has been agreed after agreement is reached.

    Take it or leave it.

    That is how Government should work.

    Hannan and Hoey and Frost are entitled to their opinions but that is all they are. The newspapers are not a co-equal branch of Government.

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    1. The TCA review process is just that - a review. It isn't the same as the (potentially, at least) more extensive 'reset'.

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  11. Prof. Grey underscores a profound truth: Brexit was not just a mistake in economic or political terms; it was a misreading of the global trajectory. The world is not moving toward a fragmented, sovereignty-driven future but is instead being reshaped by the tension between cooperation and coercion. Britain's task is to decide which side of history it wants to be on. The choice is not just about policy - it is about identity, values, and the kind of world the UK wants to help build.

    To date, Starmer has not acted as a leader but as a follower of the path of least resistance. His fear of making mistakes is his biggest mistake of the lot. I share much of Prof. Grey's opinion of what needs to happen but, unfortunately, have little confidence that it will actually happen. Starmer's approach to the election ("carrying a Ming vase across an ice rink") delivered a huge parliamentary majority but the caution that got him there will be his (and the UK's) undoing - as the electorate look elsewhere (even, God-forbid, to Reform) for solutions.

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  12. If Starmer is looking for a "win" in UK/EU relations, he could do worse than look west to Ireland where there is a growing realisation than any resolution of the Northern Ireland problem also needs a new east west British Irish relationship as provided for in the Good Friday Agreement.

    This already encompasses a common travel area, informal security cooperation, A € Billion investment in cross border infrastructure by the south, and a general warming of relationships now that the Brexit fever has passed.

    I'm sure the new Irish government led by a pragmatist in the Starmer mold in Micheál Martin would be open to the idea of a new British Irish Treaty encompassing more formal security cooperation, joint energy infrastructure, improved transportation links and customs arrangements, diplomatic cooperation and the emergence of all island vetinary controls, healthcare and educational cooperation without impinging on areas of EU competency. North South trade within Ireland is already booming, and east west trade has shown signs of recovery from long term decline.

    If Starmer wants to show what international cooperation can achieve, starting with your nearest neighbour would be the best place to start. Of course it would annoy some unionists like Kate Hoey, but they are head wreckers who must be marginalised in any case. As the recent ARINS survey has shown, the vast majority on the island, north and south, are supportive of increased cooperation north south and esat west.

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  13. Long time French reader here.
    I think it would be foolish to try to predict the consequences of the Trump régime, other than compare it to the butterfly in the chaos theory. They will be vast, far reaching, and long lasting. Although History never quite repeats itself, I'm inclined to think of the global impacts of Napoleon or World War I for points of comparison.
    In that context, I agree with Prof. Grey that the UK is uniquely unsuited to cope with the new world that's likely coming. Even its ability to provide the basics, like food, are in question. The analogy with squatters who trashed the house but refuse to go is pure genius. To pastiche Sartre: no exit.

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    1. On a personal level, there is an exit for me. I'm voting leave and emigrating at the end of the month. I'm in the fortunate position to be able to get a visa through investment.

      According to The Times, there is one millionaire every 45 minutes leaving the UK.

      I share your view that things are likely to get really quite rough, and I'm just finding the daily stress of dealing with it too much. Life is too short!

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  14. YouGov: for every 100 people who thought it was right to leave the EU, 183 think it was wrong and 47 don't know.

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  15. Great column and useful compression of the speed of what is happening. This alone seems to have overwhelmed Mr Starmer, which is surprising considering Labour has had since last July to consider the potential outcomes of different scenarios geopolitically. Naturally we await from the Brexiters the answer to Dean Acheson's question but hear nothing except perhaps that they are prepared to be Trump's bitch.

    Sadly outside of the EU the UK defence industries are prevented from supplying arms and equipment for military use. The UK is partly but not fully in PESCO (in my view it should be fully inside) and of course it does not have use of the military side of Galileo. I am not aware of the missile 3D terrain mapping capabilities the UK has (at least without US mapping data) so we are not as useful to defence of Europe as we should be. This should have been a No 1 priority to replace this satellite system on leaving the EU. It requires around 26/28 satellites but you might find there are no available wavelengths to use....

    While it has perhaps seemed globally very unstable globally since 2016 the withdrawl of the US from the world and at the same time US threats to sovereign countries leaves this compounded. There is no US plan for the Middle East and that alone could lead to mass migration of 2-3 million people all over the place. We saw what Syrian migration in 2014/15 did in the UK and Europe.

    I have no doubt that this is the most dangerous situation the UK and maybe the world has faced for quite some time. It would be good to hear a little of the principle defending the liberal order and the Rule of Law from Starmer. He does indeed have a unique opportunity in his premiership, he should use it and take the UK voters with him. I suspect he would be rewarded rather than punished. A choice is certainly coming it will be interesting to see which options are chosen, but if not European integration at least to a better level than now, Starmer will forced into a humiliating position.

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  16. I don't know, but much of this post sounds like bluster from a nation which still thinks it is a world power, or even a medium-sized power, when it is not. The UK is capable of preventing itself from being attacked by conventional arms (because it can retaliate with nuclear arms), but that's about it. It cannot project power beyond its shores unless it is helped to do so by the Americans, and by that acid test it is a non-power.

    The EU is bigger but no better. The French can't even project power into powerless Africa - they're withdrawing en masse.

    Suppose the Americans decided to take over Greenland, say by telling the 51000 Greenlanders to go to Denmark (or Jordan??) and then planting their flag somewhere on the ice. What would/could the EUUK do? Fight the US militarily? Don't be ridiculous. The most the EUUK would do is to talk about international law and tsk tsk and maybe put in sanctions, but probably not even that, because sanctions would hurt the EUUK even more than it hurts the US. The EUUK would get mad, obviously, but that's the resort of a continent which benefits from the rules but is unable to marshal the force to enforce them.

    The EU cannot, for instance, turn to Russia. Russia just invaded Ukraine, and in terms of the population destroyed, that's far worse than what the Americans would do to Greenland. Maybe the EU would turn to China, but China doesn't look very concerned about "the rule of law" or the liberal world order when it plans to take over Taiwan. In brief, there are no meaningful alliances for the EU/UK to make.

    The question isn't just, How many divisions does Europe have? but
    what future does Europe have? The primary concern of European citizens, is to enjoy life, and while that probably seems the obvious objective for anyone reading this blog, it's not one that leads to a state which can project power.

    So really, practically, should the US plant its flag on Greenland, what does "standing up to Trump" concretely mean? What does the UK do? I love this blog, and probably my reaction is overwrought, but it's the same as I had forty years ago, when at Oxford, I once listened to my British friends ramble on about how they were going to rule the world. "The UK, maybe," I interjected.

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    1. I don't know about "overwrought", but it is certainly unfair and inaccurate to suggest that anything I have written here or anywhere else is "bluster" about the UK still being a "world power". Quite the reverse.

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    2. It’s clear every major proponent of Brexit has a different view of what Brexit means whilst every opponent of Brexit sees clearly the growing reality. Starmer, Davey and the Greens should attack them individually and expose their division and meaningless slogans. Take the dwindling Daily Mail, the Express and Telegraph and Times head on by exposing their lies and blatant Propoganda. Slowly but surely they need to be ground down. Tough ask … is he brave enough, tough enough … wise enough???

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  17. Interesting that this commenter “…much of this post sounds like bluster from a nation which still thinks it is a world power…when it is not” seems affronted that you have the hutzpah to write with intellectual authority about our miserably diminished little country. Perhaps the intellectual poise the UK was once known for is all we have left, sadly only visible these days in the interstices of public media.

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    1. No, I love it when Chris writes about the miserably diminished little country which the UK is. I hope he continues, and too bad he only does it every other week rather than weekly.
      Where I am opposed is the idea that the UK with the EU is much better - has significantly more power. Europe has no power, except to prevent (maybe) its own invasion. It cannot project power outside its shores, because it needs US help to do it, which is saying it can't do it. The only country in Europe which can operate militarily independently of the US is France, and then France is a military midget which just got chased out of Africa, the most powerless region in the world, and can field an army of soldiers of at most 15000 men (the rest of the army is basically support staff for the 15000). So it is an illusion to think that the UK or the EU or the UK + EU can "stand up" to Trump, unless standing up is some kind of performance art. If the US annexed Greenland, the UK + EU could do nothing. That's just the reality. Probably I misunderstood Chris when he was talking of "standing up" and I just wanted to rant, but that's the rant I wanted to make.

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    2. I don't think anyone - and certainly not me - is even remotely considering the UK or the EU taking military action against the US.

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    3. What exactly does it mean to "project power"? Because it seems to be a euphemism for military attack or invasion. European nations having experienced two world wars and the gain and loss of empires are justifiably cautious about this sort of thing. Probably because they see it as a very costly and ineffective way to solve problems.
      France is withdrawing from it's former African colonies, for example, because it has been asked to do so and has better sense than to try to remain where it isn't welcome. The replacement of French troops by Wagner Group mercenaries has seen "peacekeepers" replaced by yet another gang of terrorists, but that is not the fault of the French. Any attempt to remain in the face of hostile local governments would have made a bad situation worse.
      I have heard the United States referred to as "an empire in denial" as an explanation for it's tendency to "project power" and cause "regime change" and then fail, spectacularly, to follow through on the, much longer and more difficult, imperialist task of building something to replace what they have knocked down. What have all the decades of "power projection" since WW2 actually gained for America, let alone the rest of the world? I suspect that a military occupation of Greenland would swiftly prove unpopular with the American taxpayer.
      Oh, and all modern armies have a long "logistical tail", the French army is not unique in that. The US army for example has only about ten percent of it's personnel in combat roles.

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    4. The power the EU has and uses most often is the Brussels Effect, which it uses to project influence across the world. It's soft power, based entirely on the basis that other countries want to sell things to Europeans.

      That's not military power though. If you asked Europeans whether they want do project power elsewhere in the world US-style, I think most would say no. Which is why it doesn't happen.

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  18. Given Trump's increasing unpopularity (after just one month in power), I wouldn't worry much about having to side with him all the time and I would start mocking Farage for being his lapdog. I think Starmer has a great opportunity here.

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  19. I am a long-term reader of this blog, but this is my first time commenting. I am moved to do so to protest at the commenter who described this latest post (one of the very finest on the blog, in my view) as 'bluster'. Just about the last word I would apply to any of Prof. Grey's writings!

    I share the general feeling below the line that Starmer will fail to take advantage of the opportunities the current unsettled situation presents. It is not just a matter of excessive caution (although that is part of the story). What is most dispiriting is that neither he nor any of his senior ministers seem capable of conceptualising the issues in the broader terms proposed by Prof. Grey. I know nothing of confidential conversations around the cabinet table, but if ministers are seeing this as a historically significant *Wendepunkt* you would expect some evidence of that to emerge in their speeches and answers to Parliamentary questions. I have heard nothing that suggests that level of thinking, which perhaps reflects the current cabinet's very poor level of historical education.

    In any event, even if serious and constructive discussions are taking place in private, it is not enough. If we are facing a transformative crisis, an effective politician will need to explain to the electorate what is going on, and to make a case for the general principles which will guide him in handling it. Nothing of that kind is happening and nothing, I fear, in Starmer's past suggests that he is capable of rising to the level which such events demand.

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  20. The difficulty that Starmer has, is that his manifesto was hugely supportive of hard Brexit. If you look back at UKIP's positioning before the referendum, Labour today is actually taking a harder stance than even that party did.

    So the only way Starmer could make a reset work would be to at least partially refute his own manifesto. The right would then have genuine justification in accusing him of betrayal of the pro-Brexit promises he was elected on.

    Which leaves Labour tying to graft a European-style social democratic position onto a hard-right commitment to Brexit based on wanting to escape European-style social democracy.

    It's something that fundamentally makes no sense, like Socialist Thatcherism.

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    1. "The difficulty that Starmer has, is that his manifesto was hugely supportive of hard Brexit."

      And, in my view, that isn't just an accident or clever positioning. The present Labour leadership, in the post-referendum period, was more committed to ending Freedom of Movement than they were to stopping Brexit.

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    2. The present incarnation of the Labour Party are indeed Hard Brexiteers. Their red line was ending Freedom of Movement. In the 2012-2015 period they took too much notice of Maurice Glasman, who has now gone full MAGA.

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  21. "He could, in one bound, position the UK as an international beacon of decency probity, as a strong regional partner..."
    Doesn't the UK still have to fully implement its withdrawal agreement?

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  22. As a U.S. citizen, I’m having a hard time finding the words to convey just how crazy Trump’s tariff threats against Canada are. Canada has long been in a position similar to the one the UK placed itself in with Brexit, having to manage a relationship with a much more powerful neighbor to the south. Unlike the UK, Canada has managed its relationship with its southern neighbor quite well; there is absolutely no reason for the United States to pick a fight with Canada.

    I think that Trump announcing tariffs on Canada is an ongoing violation of the USMCA free trade agreement, even if he never actually puts the tariffs into effect. The USMCA didn’t just set tariff rates to zero; it made a commitment that the tariff rates would remain at zero, allowing businesses to plan for the future. Trump initially scheduled the tariffs to into effect on February 1. He subsequently changed the start date to Feb. 4, and then to March 6. I expect that sometime before March 6 he will change the start date again. The tariffs may never go into effect, but to get the full economic benefits of zero tariffs, businesses have to know that tariffs will remain at zero.

    I’m not sure how the UK should respond to Trump, but Trump’s treatment of Canada shows just how worthless an agreement with the United States is these days. Some countries will negotiate deals and then break those deals as soon as the deals are no longer in their national interest. But Trump’s treatment of Canada shows that he will break deals even when doing so harms the United States. Some national leaders, after boasting about what a great deal they had negotiated, would feel they have a stake in the success of the deal. Trump’s supporters don’t seem to care about logical consistency, so Trump can oppose a deal that he himself negotiated.

    The BBC article you link to includes the sentence, “Earlier, No 10 said the prime minister trusted Trump and pointed to ‘a really constructive early set of conversations’ between the two men." If Starmer really trusts Trump, it can’t be because of a lack of information about Trump. Instead, Starmer must be thinking, “Sure, Trump is a con man, but he wouldn’t con me.” Trump’s ability to get people to think that way is why he is such an effective con man.

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  23. Agree that this is a fabulous opportunity for Starmer to be convener in chief with smaller countries to take on Trump's bullying tactics. It'll also play very well domestically as we Brits love a plucky underdog story (see Alan Bates, Del Boy, every Ealing comedy etc).

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  24. I come back after a few days in Prague to find you're on form more than ever. Ignoring Trump (yes, I know we can't) all this to save the Conservative and Unionist Party, the *natural* party of government.

    I do wonder how influential the right wing media really are, if there is now a stronger desire to get nearer to the EU than previously. Of course there will always be those old folk who don't think, but just know, that brexit has to be good. After all they are Englishmen, the bestest race on the planet; I remember as a young boy always reading 'Made in England' on everything. And when I asked my father why he voted for brexit, after a painful silence he blurted out: 'because we won the war.'

    I feel we may have to wait a while yet for more of 'the will of the people' lot to die off, as every year that becomes less and less valid. Hey ho!

    Finally, let me offer belated condolences. You are doing sterling work in difficult circumstances, and your knowledge is clearly encyclopaedic.

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    1. Your father's comment saddens me. There was really only one winner of the war and that was America - they really cleared up - and one certain winner after Brexit was Putin - it was everything he wished for.

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  25. I think that we Europeans need to unite. You can't go anywhere alone and you risk exposing yourself to the imperialist aims of the USA, Russia and China. I think the UK should also rejoin the European Community. I know it's not easy but this would be good for everyone, both from a political and economic point of view. Greetings to you.

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