• Contact
  • About
EVENTS
DONATE
NEWSLETTER SIGN UP
  • Login
West England Bylines
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Business
  • Features
  • Region
VIDEO
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Business
  • Features
  • Region
No Result
View All Result
West England Bylines
Home News Brexit

When Project Fear became Project Reality

It is truly astonishing to reflect how much more common sense the Conservative Party of 50 years ago had than that of today.

Peter BurkebyPeter Burke
14 January 2021
in Brexit, Politics, Trade
Reading Time: 10 mins
A A
Empty shelves

Empty shelves - photo by author, used with permission

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

“In a single generation we should have renounced an imperial past and rejected a European future. Our friends everywhere would be dismayed. They would rightly be as uncertain as ourselves about our future role and place in the world… Our power to influence the [European] Communities would steadily diminish, while the Communities’ power to affect our future would as steadily increase.”

From a government White Paper of 1971, discussing the likely consequences of staying outside the EEC. Quoted by Fintan O’Toole

It is truly astonishing to reflect how much more common sense the conservative party of 50 years ago had than that of today.

You may have seen the Prime Minister’s car crash interview on Andrew Marr recently. He was asked the obvious question, “what are the benefits of Brexit for the ordinary man in the street?”. You would’ve expected that this was an open goal to the king of boosterism, who must surely have spent the last four years thinking about this very question. People like you and me certainly have. What could he come up with? Saved membership contributions, freeports, borders and fishing. That was it. Savings are dwarfed by the costs of Brexit, based on the government’s own estimates. All the other quoted benefits would have been possible within the European Union.

In a word, Boris Johnson was unable to name one single benefit to members of the public. Even the fishing industry itself is feeling betrayed, it is telling us that it is actually far worse placed than it was when we were members of the EU.

‘No downside’?

As against this, the downside of Brexit is all too apparent and becoming more so every day. We knew before 24th December that the deal would be a thin one. Yet it is only now that the full horror is sinking in. I will not repeat all of what we have learned in the past 2 weeks: You just need to look on the European Movement Website, or at the Davis Downside Dossier. But I will mention a few aspects.

We did not know for sure that we would lose Erasmus or mutual recognition of qualifications or short term work permits for musicians and other creatives. The latter, even without coronavirus, could make several UK orchestras unviable. All these things, taken in conjunction with the loss of freedom of movement and with the Immigration Act, seem calculated almost deliberately to stifle cultural and professional exchanges between the UK and the EU.

Now we are learning also that the barriers to trade are even greater than we thought. We were promised tariff free trade. This is not the case. Rules of origin dictate that where products contain a significant proportion of third country ingredients, tariffs are still chargeable, sometimes at a significant rate. Furthermore, non-tariff barriers are greater than expected. Delays in transit have led to perishable foods having to be discarded. And yes, the queues so far have been small but only because throughput is down. The UK government’s requirements for EU exporters to register for VAT has led many of them to wash their hands of UK trade. In many parts of the UK, and more particularly in Northern Ireland, supermarket shelves are starting to look empty, especially of perishables. Rising food prices are already being noticed, and they are not going to fall again. The UK as an export hub for Europe has no future under these conditions. And many EU businesses have decided to give up on exporting to the UK. UK haulage companies are becoming unviable, while their EU opposite numbers are avoiding coming here for fear of problems getting home.

All the government can say to all this is that these are temporary glitches and that it is working hard to resolve them. Essentially it is telling us that it is in damage limitation mode.  This is so unnecessary. As to whether this is a teething problem or is really the new normal, I think we have to decide whether to listen to a government with a known track record of pathological optimism or whether to listen to the trade experts and the hauliers, who tell a very different story.

Certainly the £5bn of euro share dealing trade lost to the City in one day on the first Monday of the New Year, apparently against expectations, is not coming back.

We have a prime minister who was elected to office despite a stated policy of “fuck business” (his words, not mine).   I do not think even his worst enemy ever thought that he would implement this policy quite as effectively as he has.

‘Pull together’

The prevailing Brexiter fantasy is still that Brexit is good for you, or at least will be at some unspecified time in the future, or, if not, then it is somebody else’s fault, eg the EU27 for driving a hard bargain and not doing the UK any favours. The same EU27, of course, have acted from the start as they said they would.

A further fantasy is that, five years on, the time to talk about Brexit is over and we should move on.

In accord with these fantasies, many politicians, for example recently Rishi Sunak, are now calling for both sides of the Brexit debate to come together in the national interest. In response, once we have calmed down, what we say has to be quite nuanced. I think all of us do need to play a part – though not necessarily on their terms – in the damage limitation process. After all, almost everyone who has had to do the heavy lifting in this process, including the civil service and diplomatic corps, would very reasonably have preferred to remain. Without their hard work the country would go to hell in a handcart. And of course it is right to make the effort to understand and support those who voted leave in good faith.

It’s OK to feel angry

But does that mean we have to bury the hatchet with those who led the Leave campaign? This would be to forgive and forget several important facts. We have been taken into an infinitely harder Brexit than ever appeared on the ballot paper in 2016. When given the opportunity to request an extension and avoid the double crisis we’re living through right now, this government refused to do so, on purely ideological grounds, and against emphatic advice from countless stakeholders. The Erasmus programme has been dropped, in defiance of repeated promises. The services sector (80% of the economy) has been left in the cold and is waiting to find out what crumbs it will be granted by the EU, after the UK government has used up all its negotiating capital. The UK has made rivals and possibly enemies of all its nearest neighbours.

All these things were done in the name of the oft-quoted ‘17.4 million’, and with no effort at compromise, as if the 16.1 million on the other side did not exist.

We cannot forget the harms which have been done, and I would argue that this is not the time to forgive them either. Forgiveness is only possible when the perpetrator acknowledges that there is something to forgive and makes at least a token effort towards restitution. Yet we are talking here about people who pretend not to understand those basic facts, and who would never even think of using the word ‘forgiveness’.

Far from any display of goodwill or contrition the incessant lying continues. Please remember the prime minister’s repeated declaration that the deal involves no non-tariff barriers, something which the dogs in the street know to be untrue. Brandon Lewis, who should know better, has continued to claim that there is no border in the Irish Sea. And, perhaps on a more minor but nonetheless significant level, remember the repeated fraudulent claims from government ministers that such things as the early roll out of coronavirus vaccine,  the abolition of the tampon tax and the ban on pulse fishing would not have been possible while we were EU members. Spoiler alert: yes they would.

This government is doing all it can to stifle discussion. It chose this moment to end the work of the Committee on the Future Relationship with the European Union, so there is no parliamentary forum for scrutiny. And remember all of this is being done – ironically – in the name of greater sovereignty for the UK parliament.  Accountability? Not for this government.

One more word to those who say we should move on. This is precisely the moment when many people who voted leave are starting to realise what a profound mistake they have made. How can this be the right time to make them feel guilty about saying so? If there were a statute of limitations applied to the crime of taking the UK out of the European Union, the clock should not start ticking until the harms are apparent, ie now.

Yes, why would we not feel angry? It is OK to do so. But the difficult bit is to channel that anger.

In the words of Ian Dunt, who will shortly be speaking to a meeting of Oxford For Europe,

‘We have to keep in our minds that better vision of what Britain is: open, fair, diverse, moderate and engaged with the world. We have to fight for it. There’s no point getting downcast or self-pitying. We have to defend our convictions, no matter how bad things look.’

Yes, accountability matters

So far, thank goodness, we do not live in the world of Orwell’s 1984, and we are under no obligation to deny that two and two make four just because the leader tells us to. This week, for the first time, ordinary voters will start to feel how Brexit has diminished the quality of their lives. We should not rejoice in that fact, nor should we simply say ‘I told you so’. But we most certainly should not allow the blame to be placed anywhere other than where it belongs.

Ed: This piece was originally published on the Oxford For Europe website, www.oxfordforeurope.org

Previous Post

Looking at the stars in a time of dejection

Next Post

Borders and boundaries – an email from Northern Ireland

Peter Burke

Peter Burke

Peter was born in Dublin, of Irish and German heritage. He came to England for a year in 1982, and, having decided he liked working in the NHS, never got round to going back. He has worked in Oxford as a GP for the past 33 years, latterly very part-time. He is a senior clinical lecturer at Oxford University, where he teaches communication skills to medical students, and he is a GP appraiser and examiner. He has 3 children, living in Oxfordshire, Leipzig and Hollywood, and 3 grandchildren. He loves England and sees it as home, as it is where is where he and his wife Geraldine watched their children grow up. However he is deeply saddened by developments since 2016, in particular the simultaneous threats to democracy and to the economy. He is eager to help the cause of continuing collaboration with our EU neighbours, and is currently Chair of Oxford for Europe, as well as Chair of the UK Metric Association (details here: https://ukma.org.uk/about/officers/) and of the Thames Valley Faculty of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

Related Posts

Gail Bradbrook - Co-founder XR -Byline Times
Climate Emergency

Malice through the Looking Glass – Part Two

byTom Hardy
4 December 2023
Alice through the Looking Glass- Queen of Hearts - The Dark Side - CC BY SA 2 0 DEED
Climate Emergency

Malice through the Looking Glass – Part One

byTom Hardy
4 December 2023
Jerusalem Holy Sites - Wailing Wall and Dome of the Rock - Adam Fagan - CC BY-NC-SA 2 0 DEED
Human Rights

The future of Israel–Palestine – Part Two

byDr Helmut Hubel
3 December 2023
Postage stamps of Ben-Gurion and Jabotinsky - Israel Postal Company 2019
Human Rights

The future of Israel–Palestine

byDr Helmut Hubel
3 December 2023
Lady Justice, Old Bailey, Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 3.0 DEED
Book Reviews

Theory of Justice – book Review

byBob Copeland
29 November 2023
Next Post
Border on Killeen School Road

Borders and boundaries - an email from Northern Ireland

PLEASE SUPPORT OUR CROWDFUNDER

Subscribe to our newsletters
CHOOSE YOUR NEWS
Follow us on social media
CHOOSE YOUR PLATFORMS
Download our app
ALL OF BYLINES IN ONE PLACE
Subscribe to our gazette
CONTRIBUTE TO OUR SUSTAINABILITY
Make a monthly or one-off donation
DONATE NOW
Help us with our hosting costs
SIGN UP TO SITEGROUND
We are always looking for citizen journalists
WRITE FOR US
Volunteer as an editor, in a technical role, or on social media
VOLUNTEER FOR US
Something else?
GET IN TOUCH
Previous slide
Next slide

LATEST

Gail Bradbrook - Co-founder XR -Byline Times

Malice through the Looking Glass – Part Two

4 December 2023
Alice through the Looking Glass- Queen of Hearts - The Dark Side - CC BY SA 2 0 DEED

Malice through the Looking Glass – Part One

4 December 2023
Jerusalem Holy Sites - Wailing Wall and Dome of the Rock - Adam Fagan - CC BY-NC-SA 2 0 DEED

The future of Israel–Palestine – Part Two

3 December 2023
Postage stamps of Ben-Gurion and Jabotinsky - Israel Postal Company 2019

The future of Israel–Palestine

3 December 2023
Lady Justice, Old Bailey, Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 3.0 DEED

Theory of Justice – book Review

29 November 2023
Westminster, due for reform? (photo: Peter Burke)

Representative democracy, Part Two: Can it work?

28 November 2023

MOST READ

Alice through the Looking Glass- Queen of Hearts - The Dark Side - CC BY SA 2 0 DEED

Malice through the Looking Glass – Part One

4 December 2023
Desideratus Erasmus and Alan Turing (Source: Wellcome Library CC by 4.0; Princeton University)

The Turing Scheme: another false promise of levelling up

12 November 2023
Gail Bradbrook - Co-founder XR -Byline Times

Malice through the Looking Glass – Part Two

4 December 2023
Image by Nanne Tiggelman from Pixabay with replacement background by Bylines Team

WhatsAppGate 2: ‘Dr Death’

31 October 2023

BROWSE BY TAGS

Carers Cheltenham climate activism Compass Covid Gaza Germany History HS2 Humour Japan Justice Labour Language Levelling Up Media Monarchy Mudlarking NHS Nostalgia Ofsted Pedestrianisation Police post-war Potholes Poverty Press Release Prisoners of war Privacy probity Putin Refugees Rejoin Revenge satire Snapchat snooping Socialism Solar UBI United Nations video Westbury People's Gallery World War 2 World War II
West England Bylines

We are a not-for-profit citizen journalism publication. Our aim is to publish well-written, fact-based articles and opinion pieces on subjects that are of interest to people in West England and beyond.

West England Bylines is a trading brand of Bylines Network Limited, which is a partner organisation to Byline Times.

Learn more about us

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • Authors
  • Complaints
  • Contact Us
  • Donate
  • Letters
  • Privacy
  • Network Map
  • Network RSS Feeds
  • Submission guidelines

© 2023 West England Bylines. Powerful Citizen Journalism

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Brexit
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Europe
    • Health
    • Media
    • Transport
    • World
  • Business
    • Economy
    • Energy
    • Farming
    • Technology
    • Trade
  • Features
    • Broken Britain
    • Climate Emergency
    • Ukraine Conflict
    • Women in Focus
  • Politics
    • Democracy
    • Electoral Reform
    • Equality
    • Human Rights
    • Immigration
  • Society
    • Book Reviews
    • Culture
    • Dance
    • Food
    • Heritage
    • Language
    • Music
    • Poetry
    • Sport
  • Region
    • Bristol and Bath
    • Gloucestershire
    • Herefordshire and Worcestershire
    • Oxfordshire
    • Swindon
    • Wiltshire
    • Society
  • Opinion
  • Newsletter sign up
  • Letters
  • Cartoons
  • Video
  • Events
  • Sewage Watch
CROWDFUNDER

© 2023 West England Bylines. Powerful Citizen Journalism

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In