Alphen,
Netherlands. 2 September. This summer I successfully undertook three major projects. First,
under the command of the Supreme Authority here I decorated a bedroom. Second,
working closely with a much esteemed friend and colleague I finished a new
book. Third, I constructed a pond in my back garden. The pond is about the size
of Jean-Claude Juncker’s Luxembourg, although not as wet, and comes complete
with my homage to the Dutch mountains (together with mountain spring and
utterly naff mountain stream). Complex projects all; but with a bit of
thinking, planning and a lot of muscle, success! In other words, if one puts
one’s mind to something one can achieve a lot.
Which brings me to
Brexit. This week Prime Minister May held an ‘at home away day’ for ministers
at her official posh country residence Chequers to discuss how to make Brexit
happen. As she talked the former Head of the Civil Service Lord Gus O’Donnell
(aka G.O.D) was opining in the media that the collapse of the Roman Empire was
as nothing compared with the travails of Brexit, or words to that effect. So, having endured dire warnings about
pending economic Armageddon if Britain left the economically-destitute EU, I am
now told by G.O.D. that extricating Britain from the EU will be the
most difficult political and legal exercise in recorded history. How so and why
so?
On the face of it
G.O.D’s warnings look like yet another attempt by die-hard Remainers to delay
Brexit in the hope that the British people will face up to their ‘folly’ and
cancel out 23rd June with a new referendum expressing ever-dying
love for Project Europe and those
lovely people in Brussels. ‘Fraid not! All the latest opinion polls show that
same majority for Brexit as set Britain on this path back in June.
One of the
arguments made by G.O.D. is that simply disentangling British law from EU law will
be a gargantuan task. Why? What's the rush? After Article 50 is
eventually triggered a process will begin that will take many years during which all existing laws will be reviewed. Some of the laws will be good,
some indifferent, and some bad but there need be no rush to change laws. What
matters is that one starts with the current corpus of statutes and the review
process.
Another of the
arguments is that Britain now lacks the expertise to conduct trade
negotiations. Surely, if necessary, London can buy in such expertise until
Britain’s own house-trained trade negotiators are up to speed? Again, there
would appear to be no particular need for haste. First, Britain’s future
trading relationship with the EU will be a political decision not a technical
one. What really matters is that Britain is the world’s fifth biggest and
Europe’s second biggest economy. Power is what dictates such arrangements, not
technical attribute. Second, the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership
is fast falling apart. Obama wanted Britain in the EU to help save it. Obama is
dead political meat.
Which brings me to
the real problem with Brexit; the British political class. It is a problem that
has dogged Britain for years and which explains why Britain never actually
behaves these days as the world’s fifth largest economy or Europe’s leading
military power. Rather, much of the British political elite believe Britain
to be a small wind-swept island off the West coast of Europe. Worse, it is are
fundamentally split about the real issue at the heart of Brexit – EU trade versus
EU immigration.
The evidence
suggests a majority of those who voted for Brexit did so in the belief that
Britain would regain ‘control’ over its borders, i.e. immigration. The problem for them is that whilst the referendum was an
exercise in direct democracy it is the denizens
of representative democracy who will control much of the process in Government and/or the House of Commons. A majority of them put access to the
EU single market above control over immigration. Squaring this British circle
could prove impossible.
Which brings me to the political problem of Brexit. First, the Conservative Party is
split, the Labour Party is off into the fantasy realm of the red fairies, the
Scottish Neverendum Party simply wants to destroy Britain, and the rest of them
are led by a bunch of political nonentities. Second, unless the political class
really believe in Britain’s ‘independent’ future London’s negotiating position
will be weak from day one. Third, unless Britain’s political class show
sufficient unity of effort and purpose in agreeing a vision of Brexit Britain’s
negotiators will soon find themselves in an impossible position as London’s ‘red
lines’ wobble all over the place. Fourth, unless the political class commit to
the long-term and do not seek to change aspects of Brexit the civil service,
excellent though it is at saving Britain from its politicians, will be simply unable
to work its customary magic, G.O.D. or no G.O.D.
Prime Minister May
has called for a “unique” deal for Britain which would see only those with a
guaranteed job allowed to enter Britain from the EU, in return for full British
access to the Single Market, including so-called ‘passporting rights’ for
Britain’s financial services. If Brexit is to be made to work then both the
British people and their politicians will have to confront the stark reality
that is staring them in the face; free trade with the EU or controls on EU immigration.
They are unlikely to get both.
Ho hum!
Julian
Lindley-French
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