“Men [and Women] who are capable of
real action first make their plans and then go forward without hesitation while
their enemies have still not made up their minds.”
Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian
War
Alphen, Netherlands. 21
April. First, a very Happy Birthday to both my bosses; my wife and Her Majesty
Queen Elizabeth II. Second, let me define for you the meaning of ‘to make hay
whilst the sun shines’. It is to make
the most of any given circumstance or opportunity. British Prime Minister Theresa
May is certainly ‘making hay’. Her not-so-surprising call of a ‘snap’ June 8
General Election has caught many off-balance; friends and opponents alike. The
likelihood that she will win is clear, what is less clear is whether she will
get the thumping parliamentary majority she seeks to do what she thinks she
needs to do. So, what are the domestic and international reasons for Theresa May
to call what will undoubtedly be dubbed ‘May’s Brexit Election’?
1.
Consolidate
her Brexit negotiating position in Parliament: As
soon as the courts stopped her using royal prerogative to trigger Article 50 to
begin Britain’s departure from the EU to my mind a general election was inevitable.
There were simply too many barriers, and too many Trojan horses that could
undermine her Brexit negotiating position. Although the Labour Party supported
the triggering of Article 50 its deep divisions mean it is likely engage in a
form of guerrilla warfare throughout the process if for no other reason than to
keep it slavishly pro-EU membership happy. Add unstable Labour to the
contrarily pro-EU SNP and the EU fantasists in the Liberal Democrats, as well
as the small, but influential rump of anti-Brexiteers to the left of her own Conservative
Party, May could be politically ambushed at any time during what are going to
be fraught negotiations with Brussels.
2.
Consolidate
her Brexit negotiating position within the Conservative Party: It
is not just the Tory left she fears. She will at some stage have to face down
the implacable EU-hating Tory right. At some stage a deal will be reached with
the EU (hopefully) and that will require compromises that many on the right of
her party will find unpalatable. With a large majority that she had personally
won at the ballot box May would have a personal mandate that would enable her
to see off any challenge from the right.
3.
Make
the most of the shambles that is the Labour Party:
The Labour Party under Jeremy Corbyn has never been weaker. Decent man of the
Left that he is, his socialist/pacifist/redistributive vision for Britain simply
does not chime with much of the key constituency in any British election –
Middle England. His ‘chiming’ rings particularly weak with older, patriotic
Middle England who simply cannot see Corbyn as prime minister and, crucially,
will vote in very large numbers to keep him out of Downing Street.
4. Weaken the Scottish secessionists: Nicola Sturgeon’s Scottish
Nationalist Party did spectacularly well in the 2015 general election winning
56 of the 59 parliamentary seats in Scotland. Now that Sturgeon has been in
government in Edinburgh for some time there are signs that her ‘blame the
English for everything to gain independence’ strategy is beginning to wear thin
with centrist Scottish voters. It is hard to see how Sturgeon could do better
than 2015 at the June 8 elections.
5.
Shore
up her negotiating position with the EU: Leaked documents overnight
from the European Commission reveal not only its negotiating position, but also
the extent to which the EU is morphing from democratic union into a form of
dictatorial empire which seeks to punish any member-states that dares
countenance leaving the EU. May is clearly going to face one hell of a fight
with Commission, and its rubber-stampers in the European Parliament. The Commission’s
attempt to impose the European Court of Justice on a post-Brexit Britain will turn
ugly if she is to resist the Commission’s colonial/imperial strategy. For that
she will need to be politically strong at home, not least to see off the EU
dreamers and fantasists in parliament.
6.
Make
the most of Britain’s strengths: As the Commission was
preparing to commence hostilities yesterday 800 British troops were arriving in
the Baltic States to lead part of NATO’s efforts to ensure credible deterrence
against Russian intimidation. Next week RAF Typhoon fighters will fly to south-eastern
Europe to help protect the air space of Bulgaria and Romania. The real danger from
an overtly hostile and aggressive Commission Brexit negotiating position is
that very quickly the British people will begin to ask why they are being
expected to defend people and states who are part of a bloc that seems determined
to damage Britain for an act of democracy. If that happens NATO will not be
insulated from the strategic and political fall-out of Brexit.
7.
Fight
the Brexit money fight: The real Brexit fight with the EU
will come down to money. The EU is about to lose some 16% of its entire budget.
There are only 6 EU member-states which pay 67% of the entire EU budget and the
loss of the British money will impose more cost on those few states that in
effect part for the EU. Britain has an economy worth some $3 trillion which is
larger than 20 of the EU 28 member-states combined. The loss of British money
could in effect bankrupt the EU, which is why Brussels is demanding a €60bn ‘divorce’
settlement. May will face a tough fight over money.
8.
Eventually
get a sensible Brexit deal through Parliament:
At some point a sensible, negotiated deal will be reached. Such a deal will
involve the British paying some not insignificant moneys into the EU budget for
some time to come. It will also need to involve sensible, transitional arrangements
on trade and people. Given her current slim majority of 17 in the House of
Commons when she presents the deal she could be held hostage by a mix of Brexit
deniers and Brexit hardliners.
9.
Reinforce
May’s own personal political legitimacy: The decisions that are
going to be taken over the next five years will be truly historic for both
Britain and the rest of Europe, with profound implications for NATO and Britain’s
wider strategic relationships. Theresa May became prime minister by
Conservative Party fiat when David Cameron resigned after the Brexit
referendum. May needs a general election to reinforce her own political
authority, legitimacy, and indeed capital, during what is going to be a bumpy
five years.
Taking all of the above together it is hard to see
that Prime Minister Theresa May had any other choice than to call a snap
election. Faced with either being seen as a strong Margaret Thatcher or a weak
John Major, May has clearly opted to be the former. However, whether or not she
achieves her strategic and political aims with this election, well that is a
completely different question.
It is never dull in Blighty these days!
Julian Lindley-French