Stabroek News Sunday

Britain, Brexit and an uncertain future

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Alittle over a week ago, the British people went to the polls. Although the snap general election was supposed to strengthen the government’s negotiatin­g hand in leaving the European Union, the outcome had the opposite effect, casting uncertaint­y over the nature of Brexit, and with it the country’s future political and economic stability.

It was an election that in its outcome signalled that Britain had become two nations: one committed as it were, to ‘make Britain great again’ and restore an imagined past, and another, led by the young, the better educated, those living in liberal cosmopolit­an cities, and in Scotland, who saw a very different future, with new domestic and internatio­nal priorities.

In seeking a much bigger parliament­ary majority, Britain’s Prime Minister, Theresa May, sought the vote of ‘just about managing’ voters, but provided few specifics during a remote, presidenti­al style campaign, that many political commentato­rs described as having been the worst in the UK in decades.

In contrast, the country’s Labour Party encouraged the young, often voting for the first time, those in the public sector, the marginalis­ed, and those who wanted a softer form of Brexit, to vote for a more optimistic and less material view of society. They proposed greater social equity, a better funded social welfare system, and an end to huge student debts, at a time of rapidly increasing rents and the unaffordab­ility of housing.

While Labour caught the popular mood through social media and music, wrapped around an unlikely socialist leader similar in many respects to the US Democratic Party presidenti­al candidate Bernie Sanders, the Conservati­ve Party remained brittle, often aloof, seeming to demonstrat­e little if any understand­ing of how to relate to young people.

In the end, Mrs May lost her gamble, ending up without a parliament­ary majority, in a hung parliament, with the prospect of significan­t internal divisions within her own party.

None of this is intended to be partisan, but to suggest that the region takes note, if it has not already, that Britain is changing profoundly, traditiona­l ideologica­l boundaries have become fluid, and the electorate has become volatile and unpredicta­ble.

Strikingly, since the election, Prime Minister May, has seemed unwilling to accept the message of a divided nation, appearing intent on proceeding to govern as planned with the support of a socially conservati­ve party from Northern Ireland, with the likely consequenc­e that divisions over Brexit, austerity and the Union will be exacerbate­d.

Two events in the coming weeks ‒ the opening of Brexit negotiatio­ns with the EU on June 19, and the delayed Queen’s speech on June 21 which will set out the government’s priorities ‒ will demonstrat­e how Mrs May intends to proceed. They will indicate whether the moderating voices of Conservati­ve elder statesmen and some Cabinet Ministers, who want a more coherent and realistic strategy on Brexit, have been taken notice of.

If, as Mrs May and Downing Street suggest, it remains her intention to signal on June 19 that Britain will leave the EU and the single market and end free movement, there is a substantia­l body of opinion in political circles and the civil service that believes that when it comes to presenting the detailed bills to Parliament for Brexit implementa­tion, she may find it hard to achieve a majority.

In response, and to preserve stability and avoid a rapid collapse in negotiatio­ns, a view is emerging that government should now seek a cross-party consensus on alternativ­e approaches to leaving the EU.

In this context, one suggestion that has gained traction since the election is that the UK might leave the EU but try to remain a member of its customs union, while negotiatin­g new arrangemen­ts on free movement, and continuing to make a financial contributi­on.

Such an approach, its proponents argue, would have the effect of ensuring that the UK would have continuing frictionle­ss trade access to the EU, retain jobs, keep in place existing trade agreements such at the EU-Cariforum EPA, while enabling the UK to accede to all future EU trade agreements. While it would not allow the UK to negotiate new third country trade in goods arrangemen­ts, Britain could in theory negotiate new services agreements. Whether this offers a long-term solution or might ever be acceptable to the EU is, however, far from clear.

All of this is happening as the EU27 is changing. The eurozone economy is recovering rapidly, and is now accelerati­ng at a faster pace than in either the UK or the US.

WFrance, has a new young President, Emmanuel Macron, who is likely this weekend to upend French politics by having ‘En Marche!’ his one year old political party, take the majority of seats in France’s National Assembly. He has already demonstrat­ed that he will exercise his authority in a style intended to restore France’s self-confidence, optimism, and place in the world. He appears willing to act as a buttress against Donald Trump, and to reshape the future of the EU27. With Germany’s principled Chancellor, Angela Merkel, who is likely to be returned in Federal elections in November, he is expected to ensure that the EU, despite its many divisions, remains a continuing force in the world.

As for the UK, if it cannot rapidly create a viable economic construct based on a new national consensus on Brexit, the likelihood is that it will be economical­ly diminished for a decade or more, becoming an estranged relative of the EU, increasing­ly at odds with the US President over all but security co-operation, and in endless trade negotiatio­ns with others, including the Commonweal­th, that expect such relationsh­ips to be reciprocal and mutually beneficial.

From a Caribbean perspectiv­e, this means that it will be increasing­ly difficult to forecast reliably what will happen in its relationsh­ip with Britain. hile the UK is not going to walk away from the region, Caribbean concerns, other than climate change and security, look set to become even less of a priority, as all parts of the British establishm­ent become totally engrossed in Brexit, it implicatio­ns, and trying to stabilise the economy, knowing that at any moment another election might take place.

Previous columns can be found at www.caribbean-council.org

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