“Nature abhors a vacuum”.
Aristotle
Alphen,
Netherlands. 21 November. Why is London so crap at Brexit? In my 2015 book Little Britain: Twenty-First Century
Strategy for a Middling European Power (which is of course brilliant and
very reasonably-priced, and can be bought incredibly reasonably at www.amazon.co.uk) I state, “…managing decline has become the ethos of so many
British governments and too often simply masks the damaging lack of imagination
of a political class and a bureaucratic elite who have for so long seen
strategy made elsewhere that they now take decline for granted”. The book goes
on, “Such failings are now apparent across government, reflective of a
Westminster culture that routinely places politics before strategy”. I wrote
that passage well before this year’s Brexit referendum. Sadly, as expected, London’s
political and bureaucratic elite are making a mess of Brexit. Here are eleven reasons why.
Devolution: there are
now several competing poles of power in Britain thanks to Tony Blair’s
disastrous experiment in devolution. The Westminster Parliament looks
increasingly like an English parliament in which the Scottish, Welsh and
Northern Irish rule on English matters. One of the many implicit battles of
Brexit is the sovereignty of Westminster versus the encroaching sovereignty of
politically inimical devolved parliaments and assemblies.
The Ruling Caste: This past weekend
Lord Kerr of Kinlochard, the man who drafted Article 50 of the Treaty of
Lisbon, said that the British need mass immigration because we British are “so
bloody stupid”. Sadly, this comment typifies the arrogance of what has become
an unaccountable ruling bureaucratic elite for whom national sovereignty and
democracy are simply inconveniences. In Riga I challenged bluntly another
member of that EU governing caste who suggested openly that the British people
were too ignorant to know why they voted to leave. The EU gets blamed for a lot
that is not of its own making, but there is no question that the EU has also
fostered a ruling bureaucratic uber-elite that treats the people with utter contempt.
Irreconcilable Remoaners: Such elite
arrogance provides the political momentum for the Remoaners. Democracy works by
people accepting the results of votes. Too many Remoaners are simply refusing
to accept the referendum result thus turning a crisis into a disaster. Forget
all the guff about respecting the vote 'but' that one hear’s from such people. There
are many Remoaners in very high places determined to ensure Britain never
leaves the EU.
Incompetent Brexiteers: Too many of
the leading Brexiteers abandoned the political field of battle in the wake of
the referendum in the belief the decision had been made. And, at a political
level Theresa May decapitated the Brexit campaign by taking three of the
leaders into government, in effect muzzling them. This left the field open for
Remoaners to cause trouble. A political opportunist if ever there was one it
now looks like even Tony Blair senses a chance to return from the land of the
walking political dead to scupper Brexit.
A Divided Cabinet: Theresa
May’s Cabinet is itself hopelessly split. On one side of the split are the
so-called soft Brexiteers, i.e. Remoaners, led by Philip Hammond, who want
Britain to remain part of the Single Market. This means Britain would have to accept free
movement of citizens (as agreed in the amended 1991 Maastricht Treaty), pay
into the EU budget, and remain under the jurisdiction of the European Court of
Justice. In other words, they want Britain to remain a member of the EU,
albeit without any voting rights, the worst of all Euro-worlds. On the other
side of the split are the increasingly frustrated Brexiteers. This weekend the
latter set up the European Research Group in an attempt to hold Government to
account over Brexit.
A Politicised Civil Service:
During the thirteen years of the Blair-Brown governments the civil services
became progressively politicised. This process was reinforced by the use of
legions of so-called Special Advisors (SPADS) and years of politically-correct recruitment.
Whereas once the Civil Service was patrician conservative
with a small ‘c’, it is now overwhelmingly bourgeois, pro-EU and soft left.
Yes, making Brexit happen is technically difficult, and yes, there are still
excellent senior civil servants trying to make inchoate politics work in the
finest traditions of a once fine service. However, there are too many senior
civil servants quietly trying to frustrate Brexit. The extent of this dissembling
was made clear by Cameron Downing Street insider Daniel Korski in a recent
piece in Politico.
A Hard Brexit or No Brexit: ‘Soft
Brexit’, ‘hard Brexit’, ‘clean Brexit’, ‘cliff-edge Brexit’, ‘transition
Brexit’, ‘one-minute past midnight Brexit’. There are now so many Brexit
options an already complex political challenge is fast becoming a strategic
nightmare. In fact, there are only two Brexit options – a hard Brexit or no
Brexit. This reality was reinforced to me by a senior
German politician over dinner in Brussels last Wednesday. For the EU anything else would probably
presage the unravelling of an already vulnerable and fragile Union.
The Hollowed-Out British State:
The EU has hollowed-out much of the British state through the transfer of
‘competences’ from London to Brussels. Proof positive of how successive British
governments quietly transferred huge amounts of British power to Brussels, whilst
telling the British people quite the opposite. Two leaked memos this past week have
revealed the lacunae in skills in Whitehall needed to negotiate Brexit. This
has (of course) been denied by Downing Street, but from my experience it rings
horribly true, particularly when it comes to trade negotiators.
A Politicised Judiciary: I am not one
of those who attacks the judiciary for judgements made, as I believe strongly
in the separation of powers. However, the same process that shifted the
political centre of gravity from soft right to soft left in Whitehall, and all
the assumptions that go with it, was also applied to the judiciary by Tony
Blair. Unlike many I have read the judgement of the three High Court judges on the
case brought by Gina Miller to the effect that the Government cannot use Royal
Prerogative to invoke Article 50. Sorry, but some of the ‘legal’ assumptions in
the ruling strike me as essentially, and quite clearly political.
Political Weakness: It may be
that in staying ‘mum’ Theresa May is playing a wonderfully canny game in
preparing the ground for Article 50 and Britain’s subsequent departure from the
EU. I cannot see nor have I heard any evidence to that effect. Rather, the same old
Whitehall-Westminster foreign policy tendency of wanting to appease all and sundry without
appearing to do so seems to be in play. It is precisely this weakness that has encouraged German
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble to state this weekend that Britain will be
forced to pay into the EU budget even after it leaves the EU. The consequence?
Even though Britain is a top five world economic and military power it does not
act like one. Britain will need to fight (politically) if it is to realise Brexit.
A Lack of Elite Belief in Britain: At root the Brexit fiasco reflects a London political and bureaucratic
elite too many of whom simply do not believe in Britain. Some of them even want
to break the UK into its four constituent ‘nations’ so that they could in time
become part of a new ‘state’ called ‘Europe’. Too much of the London elite
spend too much time lost in the intellectual desert that is universalism having
abandoned the very idea of patriotism and the nation-state. This sets them at
odds with huge swathes of the British people who remain stubbornly patriotic. It also creates a political gap that the likes of Nigel Farage (and Donald Trump in
the US) are filling. If the elite do not actually believe in Britain how can
they fashion a sense of the national interest other than some vague extension
of their even vaguer notions of universalism and globalism?
In spite of
my profound misgivings about the EU, its governance, its efficiency, its unworldliness,
and its erosion of democratic oversight and political accountabuility I eventually turned against Brexit.
This was partly due to reasons of geopolitics, but also because I foresaw the
almighty strategic and political mess Brexit is fast becoming. Soft Brexit?
Hard Brexit? No, we need quick Brexit, not lingering death Brexit, which is
what the elite is now conspiring to deliver.
For the sake of Britain, the EU, and indeed NATO, it is vital that Brexit is resolved in a quick, orderly and friendly manner. A responsible elite would recognise this strategic truism, honour the vote that was taken on June 23rd as I have, and move to re-establish a new relationship with the EU outside of the institutions. In so doing they would pull together to realise the will of the people in what was a UK-wide vote and make it so.
For the sake of Britain, the EU, and indeed NATO, it is vital that Brexit is resolved in a quick, orderly and friendly manner. A responsible elite would recognise this strategic truism, honour the vote that was taken on June 23rd as I have, and move to re-establish a new relationship with the EU outside of the institutions. In so doing they would pull together to realise the will of the people in what was a UK-wide vote and make it so.
Is that going
to happen? No. Why? Brexit is precisely the big, complex, strategic, substantive process London has become useless at. And, because too much of the British political and bureaucratic
elite is not only irresponsible…it is also crap!
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.