Irish Independent

Trump is not getting the Brexit he wants

- Therese Raphael

NO WONDER Donald Trump sounded worried as he arrived in the UK for his visit.

It wasn’t the protesters waiting at every stop, or even the giant orange Trump Baby balloon floating over London that’s likely to have irked the thin-skinned US president most. It’s the fact that a great, populist juggernaut that so closely prefigured his own rise to power is sputtering.

Trump seems bothered. He declared the UK in “turmoil” as he left Washington, and seemed to be goading Prime Minister Theresa May by suggesting on Thursday that Britain is backing away from Brexit.

His ambassador, Robert ‘Woody’ Johnson, recently dispensed with the niceties of diplomacy when he decried the “defeatist attitude” he witnessed toward Brexit and told the UK to pull itself together and take inspiratio­n from Trump.

Then there was Trump’s explosive interview with ‘The Sun’ on Thursday, in which he said Theresa May’s soft Brexit plans would kill the chances of a US/UK trade deal – before backtracki­ng on that yesterday and calling ‘The Sun’ piece “fake news”.

But Trump’s interest can’t be all about a future UK-US trade deal, which is what Brexiteers keep talking about. The US may be Britain’s largest single-country export market, but it is well behind the EU, where about 43pc of UK goods and services exports go and which is the source of 54pc of imports. The US does more trade with Canada, Mexico and China.

A UK-US trade agreement would be nice, especially as a reward for Britain’s security support. But it’s not the kind of deal that is going to keep Trump up at night.

Rather, Trump has good reason to focus on the details of the UK’s Great Divorce because of what its problems say about his own grand projects – his Mexican border wall, his trade wars, his North Korean denucleari­sation – when they come up against reality.

It’s becoming clear now to Britons that the promised benefits of Brexit aren’t likely to materialis­e, and that the best they can hope for is a divorce settlement with Europe that minimises the disadvanta­ges of leaving.

That’s a long way from the grand ambition expressed by the Brexiteers’ campaign rallying cry, “Take Back Control”. And it has to make Trump wonder whether Americans might start thinking the same about “Make American Great Again”

Both populist slogans were oxygenated by an external enemy: Where Trump declared war on immigrants and the Washington swamp, Brexiteers spit venom at a sovereignt­y-usurping foreign bureaucrac­y. If Brexiteers could rally people against smug Eurocrats in Brussels, then surely Trump could win Americans to his side too. Like his candidacy, the Leave campaign succeeded against considerab­le odds.

But the Brexit dream, as exforeign secretary Boris Johnson put it in his resignatio­n letter on Monday, is dying. It’s not that Brexit won’t happen; even now, it’s hard to imagine a way back to a prereferen­dum world. But Leave leaders marched their followers up a hill from where they now survey a muddy, costly and laborious path with none of the promised “sunlit uplands” Brexiteers appropriat­ed from Churchill’s famous peroration.

On Thursday, May’s government published its first detailed document setting out proposals for a future relationsh­ip with the EU. It came with oratory about leaving the European single market and taking back legal control, but the reality is that she’s seeking a deal that apes a lot of existing arrangemen­ts in an attempt to keep trade flowing and prevent economic losses.

Trump, the self-proclaimed deal-maker, might have noticed that Britain’s large financial services sector has been left in the lurch.

May’s plan is so offensive to hardcore Brexiteers that two senior ministers, Boris Johnson and Brexit secretary David Davis, resigned in the days after her plan was revealed to the cabinet, and many more have been plotting to undermine it.

And yet it’s just an opening bid in negotiatio­ns that have a long way to run. There’s every possibilit­y the EU – which insists that its single market freedoms of goods, labour, capital and services cannot be turned into an à la carte buffet –

Both Brexiteers and Trump channeled dissatisfa­ction with the status quo. Both lacked a workable vision of a new order

will reject the offer. There’s still a possibilit­y the UK and EU will not reach a deal, in which case a very harsh Brexit that exposes Britain to hostile economic relations with long-time allies indeed is possible.

THE central conceit of those who led the Brexit campaign was the notion that the referendum represente­d a clear objective. The reality is that Brexiteers within May’s cabinet could not even agree on what leaving the EU should mean. It’s absurd to think voters have a clearer idea.

Both Brexiteers and Trump channelled dissatisfa­ction with the status quo and capitalise­d on the emotional draw of a clean break with an establishe­d order. But both movements lacked a workable vision of a new order. Trump stumbles from border-control edicts to tariffs to summit-wrecking.

In the same way, British hardleaver­s still haven’t articulate­d a vision of Brexit that is workable, as the UK’s new Brexit minister Dominic Raab noted on Thursday.

There is one big difference. Trump is president of the US and has certain undeniable powers.

The Brexiteers are junior coalition partners in a weak Conservati­ve government negotiatin­g with a unified EU that holds better cards. The UK government’s negotiatin­g position shows just how far it is from the dream the Leavers sold voters with those catchy slogans.

That surely must make Trump a little uneasy. (© Bloomberg)

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 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ors gather in Albert Square in Manchester as part of the protests against the visit of US President Donald Trump to Britain. Photo: Danny Lawson/PA Wire
Demonstrat­ors gather in Albert Square in Manchester as part of the protests against the visit of US President Donald Trump to Britain. Photo: Danny Lawson/PA Wire
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