Brexit’s
Stunning Coup By TONY BLAIR JUNE 24, 2016 London
—
THE decision of British voters in Thursday’s referendum to leave the European
Union will have vast consequences for Britain, for Europe and for the world.
For a day, the British people were the government, and by 52 percent to 48
percent, they took the decision to go.
I
was a British prime minister who believed completely that Britain’s future lay
in Europe. I was the prime minister responsible for legislating substantial
selfrule in Scotland so that it would remain part of the United Kingdom. I negotiated
the Good Friday Agreement so that Northern Ireland could be at peace within
Britain. Because the result of the referendum has put so much of this at risk,
Friday became a day of great personal, as well as political, sadness.
The
immediate impact of the Brexit vote is economic. The fallout has been as swift
as it was predictable. At one point on Friday, the pound hit a 30year low
against the dollar, and a leading British stock index had dropped more than 8
percent. The nation’s credit rating is under threat. The lasting effect,
however, may be political, and with global implications. If the economic shocks
continue, then the British experiment will serve as a warning. But if they
abate, then populist movements in other countries will gain momentum. How did
this happen?
The
right in British politics found an issue that’s causing palpitations in the
body politic the world over: immigration. Part of the Conservative Party,
allied with the farright U.K. Independence Party, took this issue and focused
its campaign to leave Europe on it. This strategy could not have succeeded,
though, without finding common cause with a significant segment of Labour
voters. These Labour supporters did not get a clear message from their own
party, whose leader, Jeremy Corbyn, was lukewarm about remaining in the union.
They were drawn by the Leavers’ promise that Brexit would bring an end to the
country’s perceived immigration problems. And, worried about their flatlining
incomes and cuts in public spending, these Labour voters saw this vote as an
opportunity to register an antigovernment protest. The strains within Britain
that led to this referendum result are universal, at least in the West.
Insurgent movements of left and right, posing as standardbearers of a popular
revolt against the political establishment, can spread and grow at scale and
speed.
Today’s
polarized and fragmented news coverage only encourages such insurgencies — an
effect magnified many times by the social media revolution. It was already
clear before the Brexit vote that modern populist movements could take control
of political parties. What wasn’t clear was whether they could take over a
country like Britain. Now we know they can.
Those
in the political center were demonized as out-of-touch elites, as though the
people leading the insurgency were ordinary folks — which, in the case of the
Brexit campaign, is a laughable proposition. The campaign made the word
“expert” virtually a term of abuse, and when experts warned of the economic
harm that would follow Brexit, they were castigated as “scaremongers.”
Immigrants were described as a bunch of scroungers coming to grab Britons’ jobs
and benefits when, in reality, the recent migrants from Eastern Europe
contribute far more in taxes than they take in welfare payments. And besides,
immigration to Britain from outside the European Union will not be affected by
the referendum decision.
The
political center has lost its power to persuade and its essential means of
connection to the people it seeks to represent. Instead, we are seeing a
convergence of the far left and far right. The right attacks immigrants while
the left rails at bankers, but the spirit of insurgency, the venting of anger
at those in power and the addiction to simple, demagogic answers to complex
problems are the same for both extremes. Underlying it all is a shared
hostility to globalization.
Britain
and Europe now face a protracted period of economic and political uncertainty,
as the British government tries to negotiate a future outside the single market
where half of Britain’s goods and services are traded. These new arrangements —
to be clear about the scale of the challenge — must be negotiated with all the
other 27 countries, their individual parliaments and the European Parliament.
Some governments may be cooperative; others won’t want to make leaving easy for
Britain, in order to discourage similar movements. Britain is a strong country,
with a resilient people and energy and creativity in abundance. I don’t doubt
Britons’ capacity to come through, whatever the cost. But the stress on the
United Kingdom is already apparent. Voters in Scotland chose by a large margin
to remain in Europe, with the result that there are renewed calls for another
referendum on Scottish independence. Northern Ireland has benefited from
virtually open borders with the Republic of Ireland. That freedom is at risk
because the North’s border with the South now becomes the European Union’s
border, a potential threat to the Northern Ireland peace process.
If
the people — usually a repository of common sense and practicality — do
something that appears neither sensible nor practical, then it forces a period
of long and hard reflection.
My
own politics is waking to this new political landscape. The same dangerous
impulses are visible, too, in American politics, but the challenges of
globalization cannot be met by isolationism or shutting borders. The center
must regain its political traction, rediscover its capacity to analyze the
problems we all face and find solutions that rise above the populist anger. If
we do not succeed in beating back the far left and far right before they take
the nations of Europe on this reckless experiment, it will end the way such
rash action always does in history: at best, in disillusion; at worst, in
rancorous division. The center must hold. Tony Blair was the prime minister of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland from 1997 to 2007.
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