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<nettime> Chris Grey: The Brexit aporia


< https://chrisgreybrexitblog.blogspot.com/2019/05/the-brexit-aporia.html >   

Friday, 31 May 2019

The Brexit aporia

   Posted by Chris Grey 

   As anticipated [5]in my post a month ago, Britain is well on course to
   squander the extension period, primarily by virtue of the Tory
   leadership contest. That will take us to July, when everything will
   pretty much stop for the summer in Westminster and Brussels. So Brexit
   is effectively on hold until September, as, apparently and
   astonishingly, is [6]Labour's decision on whether to have a clear
   policy on it. Then there will be a couple of months left before the
   extension is due to expire.

   The next Prime Minister seems highly likely to seek to renegotiate the
   Withdrawal Agreement (WA) and especially to try to replace the Irish
   backstop with `alternative arrangements', or to place a time limit on
   it. This is a non-starter, one very good reason being [7]the terms
   under which the October extension was granted which specify (paragraph
   12): "this extension excludes any re-opening of the Withdrawal
   Agreement". There will be no renegotiation, something [8]reiterated by
   Michel Barnier in an interview this week and underscored by the EU
   [9]starting to dismantle its Brexit negotiating team.

   As for the nonsense of `alternative arrangements', this has been
   discussed ad nauseam on this blog and elsewhere but [10]an excellent
   new piece this week by Sam Lowe of the Centre for European Reform
   provides a measured summary. Yet a belief in this nonsense is now
   hard-baked into Tory thinking on Brexit, found not just amongst the
   Ultras but [11]generally more pragmatic politicians such as Damian
   Green and Nicky Morgan.

   Any half-way honest candidate for the Tory leadership would admit these
   obvious facts now. But of course then they would not be elected. So
   instead they will be forced to face them later. Thus we are set for
   exactly the same dynamic as characterised May's premiership. In order
   to manage the internal disputes of the Tory Party, the government
   pursues impossible fantasises. The EU has no need to manage the Tory
   Party and exposes the fantasies as just that. Cue more outrage about
   how unreasonable the EU are being.


   A thought experiment

   But there's a very easy way to see the flaw in that. Imagine that, the
   WA completed, the UK had been all geared up to ratify it and it was the
   EU-27 that had fallen into disarray and could not do so because of
   internal divisions. And so it was they who were seeking renegotiation
   of something that the UK regarded as having been agreed. It's not very
   difficult to see that the UK, and Brexiters in particular, would be
   outraged. And, no doubt, would be saying that, in that case, let the
   EU-27 accept the consequences of no-deal if that's what they want.

   In that context, too, imagine if it were the EU-27 who were saying that
   the thing they wanted changed (the financial settlement, say) could be
   resolved if the UK accepted the one solution that the 27 had agreed on
   (that the settlement be recalculated according to an unspecified
   formula, say). What, then, would the Brexiters' response be? Again,
   it's not hard to guess. But this is exactly the logic of what Brexiters
   argue when they say that the Brady Amendment (i.e. to remove the
   backstop in favour of alternative arrangements) should be accepted by
   the EU as it is the only thing that the British Parliament has voted in
   a majority for.

   Of course, so elementary a thought experiment is beyond Brexiters,
   plumped up with outrage and entitlement. So, come the autumn, the
   possibility of no-deal will get ratcheted up several more notches by
   the new Prime Minister (in the unlikely event that the race isn't won
   by a `no backstop or no dealer', we'll just be back to the impasse of
   May's deal). But that will face several formidable hurdles, even
   leaving aside the issue of whether Parliament could and would prevent
   it.


   The illegitimacy of no-deal Brexit

   The most obvious is that, for all that Brexit Ultras wrap [12]their
   no-deal preference in the threadbare cloth of 17.4 million voters, it
   wasn't remotely what the Leave campaign promised Brexit would mean in
   the 2016 Referendum. Indeed, [13]Vote Leave promised those voters
   (mendaciously, for it could never have happened) that negotiations
   would be completed before the UK even began the formal process of
   leaving. It's inconceivable that a no-deal platform would have won in
   2016, and it is a mark of how cowed many mainstream politicians have
   become that they would even countenance it as being the `will of the
   people'.

   Certainly it is [14]not justified by recent polling evidence, which
   suggests that no-deal is supported by 25% of the electorate - a bit
   less than support leaving with a deal (27%), and considerably less than
   support not leaving at all (41%). Even [15]amongst those who voted for
   the Brexit Party in last week's European elections, where support for
   no-deal is presumably highest, only 67% want it. It is emphatically not
   a popular policy.

   This means that if the next Prime Minister does try to implement it
   next autumn - and if so it will be amid growing economic chaos as the
   October deadline approaches - there will be a huge problem of
   legitimacy. In the past, the constitutional reality that the PM can
   change mid-way through a Parliament was broadly accepted. Few
   questioned Callaghan's accession in 1976, or Major's in 1990. But,
   largely because politics has become more presidential, that acceptance
   has faded. Brown's takeover in 2007 [16]led to immediate questions
   about the need for another election, [17]as did May's accession in
   2016.

   That is going to be as nothing compared with what will happen in 2019
   when a Prime Minister - with no Parliamentary majority, holding office
   on the basis of the votes of (estimates vary but at most) 160,000
   mainly ageing Tory Party members ([18]of whom, extraordinarily, 59%
   voted for the Brexit Party at the European elections, and just 19% for
   the Conservatives) - tries to enact so all-encompassing and so divisive
   a policy as Brexit. And if the approach is the most extreme, no-deal,
   version of it then there is going to be a very serious crisis of
   legitimacy.

   It just will not wash to say that a narrow vote in 2016, one General
   Election and three leaders later, interpreted by a PM, who has not
   faced a General Election, in a way that was never proposed, which only
   a minority of voters support, and which is against the wishes of
   parliament, is in any real way a democratic process. Farage has been
   talking a lot in the last few days about the need in a democracy for
   [19]"losers' consent"; such a situation would not even have "winners'
   consent".


   The politics of the grotesque

   The "losers' consent" argument is in any case entirely bogus, even
   leaving aside the grotesque hypocrisy of it being made by [20]Farage,
   who clearly stated that had Leave lost by the same margin they won it
   would be "unfinished business". For it suggests that the reason Brexit
   has gone so horrifically wrong is because the losing side didn't accept
   the result.

   That is a further illustration of [21]Brexiters' refusal to take
   responsibility for that fact that they had no idea - and in Farage's
   case no interest in - how to deliver a viable policy. Had there been
   such a policy, most opposition would have quickly dissipated. In fact,
   it has grown as the false promises of Brexiters have become clearer. No
   one - `loser' or `winner' in a vote - is obliged to consent to
   something that, [22]within its own terms, has already failed.

   Or perhaps I am unfair to say that Brexiters refuse to take
   responsibility. After all, hasn't Farage - shrilly supported by [23]Ann
   Widdecombe - demanded [24]a seat at the negotiating table by virtue of
   the Brexit Party's showing in the European Elections?

   But that, too, is grotesque: MEPs are not in any way a part of the
   British government. They have an important job to do - not that Farage
   seems to realise that, judging by [25]his woeful record in the European
   Parliament, where his `productivity score' shows him to be ranked at
   736 out of 749 MEPs - but it is not governing Britain and you might
   expect that Brexiters, of all people, would appreciate that. It is in
   any case bizarre to propose involvement in negotiations when his policy
   is to ditch all negotiations, and to have a role in making a deal when
   his policy is not to have a deal.


   Culture war

   But, of course, Nigel Farage - "the most dangerous man in Britain" as
   [26]a New York Times article this week dubbed him - has no commitment
   to delivering anything in the national interest. His interests lie
   elsewhere, whether that be [27]westwards or [28]eastwards if indeed
   [29]there is any difference any more. Everything he says and does is
   [30]in pursuit of a culture war which [31]has little to do with Brexit.

   And it should be admitted that, through Brexit, he and his allies
   [32]have been successful in this. Whatever happens now, that culture
   war is here to stay for the foreseeable future. At worse it will
   intensify. Whatever happens now, Brexit will dominate British politics
   for years, [33]crowding out vital issues such as, currently, the
   [34]social care crisis. At worse, it will overwhelm all other policies.

   Whatever happens now, the damage already done will persist (to take
   just one of many of examples: the [35]European Medicines Agency is gone
   for good and with it the hub of the strategically crucial biomedical
   industry). At worse, it will cause a catastrophe.

   Another referendum may, conceivably, get us out of the worst practical
   consequences of the Brexit mess. But that will not win the culture war
   (what, anyway, does victory or defeat look like in a culture war?) and
   it is certainly fanciful to think that it would "cauterise the gaping
   national split and confront once and for all the many dark issue that
   lurk beneath the nativist Brexit idea", [36]as Polly Toynbee suggested
   this week. That's not an argument against another referendum but just
   to say that, even if remain won, all it would mean would be Britain
   remaining in the EU, nothing else.

   For remainers, there is no way to get back to 2016, just as for leavers
   there is no way forward to get what they were promised in 2016. In that
   sense, just as Brexit is on hold so too is Britain - suspended between
   an unrecoverable past and an unattainable future. Brexit has ceased to
   be, [37]if indeed it ever was, understandable simply as an
   `institutional' question about Britain's membership of the EU. Instead
   it has [38]morphed into a cultural battle about what Britain - England,
   especially, but not just England - is. So it has ceased to have an
   institutional answer, deliverable by normal forms of politics and
   policymaking. It is an [39]aporia, a pathless path, with no way forward
   and no way back.



References

   5. http://chrisgreybrexitblog.blogspot.com/2019/04/britain-looks-set-to-squander-extension.html
   6. https://www.politicshome.com/news/uk/political-parties/labour-party/jeremy-corbyn/news/104167/jeremy-corbyn-says-labour-will
   7. https://data.consilium.europa.eu/doc/document/XT-20013-2019-INIT/en/pdf
   8. https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/may/30/eu-chief-negotiator-blames-brexit-on-nostalgia-for-the-past-michel-barnier?CMP=share_btn_tw
   9. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-latest-theresa-may-eu-deal-barnier-juncker-negotiations-a8934601.html
  10. https://www.cer.eu/insights/northern-ireland-and-backstop-why-alternative-arrangements-arent-alternative
  11. http://chrisgreybrexitblog.blogspot.com/2019/04/a-quiet-week-reminded-us-of-some-brexit.html
  12. https://brexitcentral.com/a-no-deal-brexit-is-the-only-way-to-save-the-conservative-party/
  13. https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/politics/no-deal-is-against-the-will-of-the-people-and-heres-the-proof
  14. https://whatukthinks.org/eu/questions/would-you-prefer-the-uk-remains-in-the-eu-leaves-with-a-deal-or-leaves-without-a-deal/
  15. https://lordashcroftpolls.com/2019/05/my-euro-election-post-vote-poll-most-tory-switchers-say-they-will-stay-with-their-new-party/
  16. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2007/oct/07/comment.politics1
  17. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AVxu6DbFlgc
  18. https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1134129655420739585
  19. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/nigel-farage-milkshake-brexit-party-bus-european-elections-protest-milkshaking-a8926011.html
  20. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-eu-referendum-36306681
  21. http://chrisgreybrexitblog.blogspot.com/2018/05/brexiters-are-running-away-from.html
  22. https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/brexit-promises-reality_uk_5bffb586e4b0864f4f6a511a?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvLnVrL3VybD9zYT10JnJjdD1qJnE9JmVzcmM9cyZzb3VyY2U9d2ViJmNkPTQmdmVkPTJhaFVLRXdpVnh2MkQ0Y1hpQWhWZERtTUJIYkE5QUlRUUZqQURlZ1FJQkJBQiZ1cmw9aHR0cHMlM0ElMkYlMkZ3d3cuaHVmZmluZ3RvbnBvc3QuY28udWslMkZlbnRyeSUyRmJyZXhpdC1wcm9taXNlcy1yZWFsaXR5X3VrXzViZmZiNTg2ZTRiMDg2NGY0ZjZhNTExYSZ1c2c9QU92VmF3Mk9HRDlYTXFsRmZRN1EyZlpmVjMzSQ&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAHY7VDNR6Pxmmeq_Cb9Cegs1HLpp-YmgpRirachJt6RBi8_gbbRFZl6ETeaTvOtAVUB6X9Ufiq3XqYsQTvEWOCjx87rBbME5sg15AaELqaGRklJheLPWe2XljzOia2N0S0lRToyTSYzUZeA6qDFG-v5X0fU5jwF6ZRai9GIX7uFO
  23. https://www.somersetlive.co.uk/news/somerset-news/south-west-european-election-results-2910904
  24. https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-eu-election-britain-farage/nigel-farage-wants-a-role-in-brexit-negotiations-prepares-for-uk-election-idUKKCN1SW10S
  25. http://www.mepranking.eu/mep.php?id=4525
  26. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/28/opinion/nigel-farage-brexit.html
  27. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/donald-trump-nigel-farage-photo-arron-banks-raheem-kassam-andy-wigmore-garry-gunster-a7416836.html
  28. https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/farage-and-russia-will-destroy-the-eu-says-brexit-negotiator-jwvhpk2p3
  29. https://edition.cnn.com/2019/05/06/opinions/trump-putin-make-russia-great-again-dantonio/index.html
  30. https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/uk/2019/05/no-time-left-try-and-appease-farage-and-trump-devotees
  31. https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/may/26/nigel-farage-brexit-party-britain-failed-democracy-us-model
  32. https://unherd.com/2019/05/how-farage-outflanked-everyone/
  33. https://www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/blog/domestic-policy-delays-are-brexit-issue
  34. https://www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/blog/government-must-not-continue-delaying-social-care-green-paper
  35. https://www.ema.europa.eu/en/news/ema-now-operating-amsterdam
  36. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/may/28/remainers-eu-elections-second-brexit-referendum?CMP=share_btn_tw
  37. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/jan/18/europe-brexit-britain-state-politics-fit-for-purpose
  38. https://ukandeu.ac.uk/the-brexit-vote-may-be-the-first-shot-fired-in-a-british-culture-war/
  39. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aporia


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