Arab News

British people are resilient … they’ve had to be

- ALISTAIR BURT

The resignatio­n of Liz Truss after just 44 days in office means that by next week the UK will have had three prime ministers in two months, four finance ministers in four months, and for most of 2022 a government working on autopilot thanks only to its hardworkin­g civil service and diplomats.

The British people are exceptiona­lly stoical. Though increasing­ly worried about the rising cost of food and energy, they get on with their lives and do not march on Parliament. Instead, this past week they watched a livestream of a lettuce, which a combinatio­n of the popular press and the erudite weekly “The Economist” had compared with Truss, urging readers to guess whether its shelf life would be longer than the prime minister’s period in office. It was. The contrast between Britain’s elected rulers and the dedicated lifelong service of the late Queen Elizabeth is painful.

The ruling Conservati­ve Party’s parliament­ary majority is in theory secure until the end of 2024, but it knows that in practice it is now on borrowed time, and must act swiftly to recover any shred of the credibilit­y it has lost. A quick election timetable will ensure that a new party leader, and therefore prime minister, is in place by Oct. 28 at the latest.

But the mechanics are only part of the story. The truth is that the Conservati­ve Party is riven by ideologica­l fissures that will ensure continuing instabilit­y, no matter who leads, unless they are honestly faced and overcome. At their heart are echoes of the Brexit debate, which polarised so many. Those Conservati­ves who were divided on that issue are equally divided on the detail of the UK’s economic outlook, between small state, free market solutions, and greater interventi­on to combat social inequaliti­es; on the extent of immigratio­n to fill labor and skills shortages exacerbate­d by Brexit; and on the relationsh­ip with the EU and the concession­s that may or may not be required to resolve issues affecting the trade border between the UK and the EU in Ireland.

There is no consensus on an individual leader who might unite competing interests at this time, and the events of the past few months have deepened personal rivalries. In short, the current UK government has only days to resolve these issues to give any chance for a new Conservati­ve prime minister to steady the ship of state and give a sense of stability to the watching financial markets, whose rejection of Truss’s economics hastened her departure.

Britain is conscious that this affects how the world sees the country. So what can the world expect from a new British prime minister?

Fortunatel­y, other institutio­ns in the

UK are sounder. Its underlying economic strength remains attractive for investors, with a robustly independen­t Bank of England partly responsibl­e for pressing the tax and spending decisions now being followed by Chancellor Jeremy Hunt, which reassured markets this week. Britain’s research and developmen­t base will drive growth in new and establishe­d industries, secured in some of the world’s best universiti­es.

Most of the country’s foreign policy commitment­s look likely to be unaffected by the domestic dramas of Westminste­r. There is a wide consensus, extending to the opposition parties, on the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Arms will continue to be supplied to Kyiv, and sanctions on Moscow will be increased. There may be a debate on defense expenditur­e; Truss had intended to increase it from 2.2 percent of GDP to 3 percent by 2030, which the impressive Defense Secretary Ben Wallace has now hard wired into his budget, suggesting that threatenin­g this in an expenditur­e squeeze would be fiercely resisted. The government had also seemed also on the point of designatin­g China a “strategic threat” to the UK rather than a “systemic competitor.” This opinion may well be followed by Truss’s successor, as it has increasing support in Parliament and through the security services.

In the Middle East, working with the UK’s historical partners will continue, and a long-sought trade deal with the GCC will be pursued. There may however be a different outcome to the review of the location of the British Embassy in Israel. Truss had promised the review as she competed for the leadership of her party, and seemed personally keen on a move from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. I suspect most of Whitehall felt that the existing arrangemen­ts worked well in accordance with internatio­nal law, and did not affect the relationsh­ip with Israel — a view probably reinforced by Australia’s recent reversal of its recognitio­n of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

Finally, another of Britain’s institutio­ns is now also working fine. Its democracy depends ultimately on the peaceful transfer of power, and an opposition becoming a “government in waiting.” The Conservati­ve Party has only itself to blame for having played such a substantia­l part in helping Keir Starmer and the Labour Party to be seen as such.

There is no consensus on an individual

leader who might unite

competing interests, and the events of

the past few months have deepened personal

rivalries

Most of the 1,880 girls’ secondary

schools in Afghanista­n are currently closed, and the Taliban has

threatened to shut those that remain in

operation

 ?? ??
 ?? Twitter: @AlistairBu­rtUK ?? Alistair Burt is a former UK Member of Parliament who
has twice held ministeria­l positions in the Foreign and Commonweal­th Office — as Parliament­ary Under Secretary
of State from 2010 to 2013 and as Minister of State for the
Middle East from 2017 to 2019.
Twitter: @AlistairBu­rtUK Alistair Burt is a former UK Member of Parliament who has twice held ministeria­l positions in the Foreign and Commonweal­th Office — as Parliament­ary Under Secretary of State from 2010 to 2013 and as Minister of State for the Middle East from 2017 to 2019.

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