Yorkshire, God’s Own
County and all that. 22 April. “We Yorkshire folk love our political
jokes. It’s just a shame we go on voting
for them.” Back in my home county of Yorkshire,
place of my birth which is gripped by election fever…not! Regular victims of my musings will have had
pause to note that not much International Relations theory ever pollutes my
blogs. This is mainly because most IR theory (not all) is complete drivel – the
semantic and the unintelligible in pursuit of the turgidly theoretical. There is one particularly school of IR theory
that really gets my Yorkshire goat; rational choice positivism. Rat choice
positivists believe one can explain all international relations without any
recourse to domestic politics. Come 7
May and the British general election and proof positive will emerge that demonstrates
that domestic politics really does matter. One of the world’s more
powerful states is about to vote itself into being one of the world’s weaker states
and gthe consequences will be profound. A weak British
state on the edge of Europe and the wider West will have the most profound
implications for international relations.
Why and how? Over the past twenty years British politicians
have handed so much power away to Brussels and every other part of the United
Kingdom except England that not only do they hate each other (normal) but most
of them are hated by the people. Consequently,
the political landscape has fractured with the result that ‘Yorkshire folk’
have a whole plethora of ‘jokes’ from which to choose, but very few in which
they actually believe. The 7 May election
is thus unlikely to decide a clear winner.
Therefore, the next government will either be a continuation of the
current Conservative-led coalition or some form of mutual murder-suicide pact
between the Labour Party and the UK-busting Scottish Nationalist Party or SNP.
Britain is also facing
the perfect domestic political storm.
First, austerity-driven budget cuts, an ageing population, mass/hyper
immigration, and a rising population have combined to destabilise the British
state. Second, the EU’s “Europe of the
Regions” policy has served to further weaken the United Kingdom to the point
where disintegration remains a very real political possibility. Third, to mask their failure politicians have
drained Britain’s foreign and defence budgets to fund domestic structures, such
as the National Health Service.
Marxist Bertold Brecht once
said that it would be ‘simpler for the government to dissolve the people and
elect another”. This general election
certainly smacks of Brecht’s justified cynicism. The political class have
attempted to avoid responsibility for their collective incompetence by simply
avoiding the issues which reflect their failure – immigration, Europe and
defence. In spite of there being clear
evidence that such issues remain high on the policy wish-lists of a majority of
voters.
A charitable analysis
would be to suggest that if a Cameron government is re-elected then Britain
will remain out of the line of international relations for a further five years
and then re-engage. If a Miliband-led
government is elected it will spend two years trying to act like a Syriza-lite
mob before common sense and the bond markets re-impose some rationality, much
like the 1981 Mitterand government in France and President Hollande today.
So, what will that mean
for rat choice positivists and international relations? At the political level neither Cameron nor
Miliband show any aptitude for international relations whatsoever beyond the
politics of “gesture aid”. At no time has either of them offered a vision for
Britain in Europe or Britain in the world. In other words, there is a profound
strategic malaise in Britain’s political leadership, add that malaise to the
coming chronically-instable government of whatever political hue eventually
emerges and to employ a technical ‘IR’ term Britain is stuffed.
Britain's retreat could not happen at
a worse moment. With the Greek debt
crisis about to kick off again far from being a rock of stability in an unstable
Europe Britain will vote itself into being another European political
basket-case. The implications for the
American-led West are dire. With the effective
loss of Britain as a serious international relations actor, a top five world
economy and military actor, a large black hole will appear in the heart of the
West marked by a large sign which will read, “Here Britain once stood firm”. Consequently,
even more strategic pressure will be placed on an already over-stretched
America. The world will be made even more dangerous and at some point the US
Congress will say “enough”.
Let us hope that by
some miracle the British people defy the polls and vote for some form of stable
government and let us hope that the strategic political lightweights vying to ‘lead’
Britain can concoct some form of credible foreign, security and defence policy
beyond the new appeasement both Cameron and Miliband espouse in their various
ways. Don’t hold your breath. Indeed, 2015 British General Election could well
mark the moment Britain ceased to matter on the world stage. Worse, the effective loss of one of the West’s
two historic anchor states and the West itself will cease to exist. Who could
possibly benefit from that?
Britain's General Election matters, not just to the British...but to you too!
Julian Lindley-French
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