Business Day

Echoes of English Civil War as constituti­onal crisis simmers

Brexit has divided nation as Cromwell did in 1642

- Alan Crawford London The English Civil War: A People’s History

At the outbreak of the English Civil War in 1642, Warwick Castle was attacked by soldiers loyal to the king who tried without success to unseat the parliament­arian forces that held it. While it was a minor skirmish, the outcome would foreshadow the broader struggle for the country.

Today, the town of Warwick is under siege of another kind, one that may similarly decide where the divided nation is headed after an escalation in the political drama over Brexit.

The UK is witnessing an historic period of upheaval that has invited comparison­s with events almost 400 years ago. Parliament has been suspended

illegally, a court in Scotland ruled on Wednesday. The prime minister is threatenin­g to flout the law to get his way, while MPs on all sides are in open revolt and Ireland’s future, north and south, is at stake.

Even the queen has become embroiled in the standoff. And violence is brewing, with scuffles outside parliament last week and a government document warning of public disorder from food and fuel shortages should the UK crash out of the EU without a deal.

MPs this week channelled an event from the run-up to the civil war to protest against the so-called prorogatio­n of the legislatur­e. Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage, one of the main architects of the vote to leave the EU, has described the constituti­onal crisis as the worst since that tumultuous period.

A tour last week through some English counties scarred by the conflict suggests he may be right. With positions hardening and no obvious release for rising tensions, it’s anybody’s guess where the Brexit dilemma ends.

Voters in Warwick opposed leaving the EU, seeing a departure as a threat to a key employer the automotive industry and to the university town’s internatio­nal outlook. But as a pro-EU bastion amid a sea of Brexit territory, Warwick

is at odds with neighbouri­ng districts, the UK as a whole and with Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve government. Those same divisions run through swathes of the country.

“If we get out of the current impasse without shots being fired, we will be doing better than I expected,” said Diane Purkiss, author of and a professor of English literature at Oxford University. “The question from here is whether we can at the last minute and in the 11th hour muddle together some kind of final British compromise.”

With its timber-framed houses, country parks and William Shakespear­e history, the county of Warwickshi­re is picture-postcard England. But beneath the patina of olde worlde charm lie stark divisions in attitudes to Brexit.

Of course, the UK has always diverged along political lines, from Thatcheris­m to Blairism. What attracts today’s comparison­s with the 17th century is the constituti­onal chaos on top. Then, the country chose sides as parliament and Oliver Cromwell’s Puritans asserted authority over King Charles I and his Catholic household in a standoff over religion and power that ultimately led to war and regicide.

In an echo of Brexit’s patchwork of “leave” and “remain” voting areas, the civil war cleaved along the lines of individual towns and cities depending on which way they declared, for parliament or the king. Indeed, the political map of the Brexit vote resembles the distributi­on of support for both sides in the civil war, Stefan Collignon, a professor at the London School of Economics, wrote in March 2018.

In Warwickshi­re, Stratfordu­pon-Avon was sandwiched between parliament­arian and royalist forces, and took in casualties from the war’s first major battle at Edgehill.

Stratford, Shakespear­e’s birthplace, is a 20-minute drive to the southwest of Warwick but a different world in its Brexit outlook. Whereas Warwick and its surroundin­gs are home to workers from the nearby Jaguar Land Rover plants and leftleanin­g, pro-European students and academics from Warwick University, Stratford relies on tourism, the hospitalit­y industry and foreign workers to staff it.

Warwick voted 59% to 41% in favour of remaining in the EU. Stratford voted 52% to 48% to leave, bang in line with the country as a whole.

Walking around Stratford, past the Tudor houses and boats on the river Avon, there is little outward evidence of tension. That is no comfort to Sophie Clausen, an artist and author originally from Denmark who first came to Britain as an art student more than 20 years ago.

That sense of indifferen­ce cannot be excused by any amount of Brexit fatigue, and is the most worrying aspect of all for Clausen.

“People switch off, they don’t care, and that’s really dangerous,” she said. “People say they just want Brexit over with, but I don’t think it will ever end,” said Clausen. “Because if it doesn’t happen, the divisions will get even deeper and people who voted leave will be even more angry,” she said. “No-one knows the way out anymore.”

Johnson has a little more than a month to try to strike a new deal with the EU that is palatable to enough MPs to enable Britain to leave the bloc in an orderly way on October 31. If he fails to do so, he is now required by law to ask for an extension, something that will almost inevitably lead to the general election he wants, to break the impasse.

Comparison­s between Johnson and Charles I over their treatment of parliament are unhelpful, according to Purkiss, the civil war author, since the king waited 11 years to recall the legislatur­e rather than the present five weeks. Yet there is a common “persistent ongoing failure of compromise” that contribute­d to the descent into conflict, she said.

Other parallels lie in the existence of concurrent crises in “the three kingdoms” of England, Ireland and Scotland; and in the emergent print media’s alarmist headlines that mirror today’s social media posts, “weaponisin­g fear mongering”, said Purkiss.

“I don’t think people are taking this threat seriously enough,” she said in an interview at Keble College in Oxford, one block away from St Giles Church, which carries a plaque describing its damage in the civil war.

At root, Brexit is the symptom of a crisis of parliament­ary democracy, with both main parties pushed to extremes and the middle ground erased, eroding willingnes­s to reach consensus. That presents a challenge for politician­s such as Jack Rankin, selected by the Conservati­ves to contest the Warwick and Leamington constituen­cy at the next election.

The district was held by the Conservati­ves for much of the 20th century, falling to Labour in 1997 as the Blair government came to power, and has changed hands between the two parties since. Matt Western retook it for Labour in 2017 with a majority of just 1,200 votes.

His pro-European views were reinforced by a previous life as a marketing manager for French carmaker Peugeot in places such as Vienna and Paris. Bridging the division “is hard because both sides of the debate are becoming entrenched in their view”, said Western. “I’m really alarmed about what’s going on in society.”

To win the seat from Labour, Rankin, who voted for Brexit, will have to appeal to a strongly anti-Brexit electorate.

He said his experience on voter doorsteps shows “the overwhelmi­ng majority are fundamenta­lly democrats and just want to get on with it”. The divisions are not as deep as commonly presented, he said in an e-mail response to questions, and healing the Conservati­ve rift “won’t happen until we deliver what we said we would”. The future is bright regardless of how Brexit plays out, he said.

That may be wishful thinking. Jaguar Land Rover CEO Ralf Speth warned in 2018 that a bad Brexit could put tens of thousands of jobs at risk. Warwick University’s vicechance­llor, Stuart Croft, has called Brexit a “disaster” and said that losing access to internatio­nal research networks could shut the UK out of the science vanguard and risk jobs.

The warnings were not lost on Barry Archer, a maker of clay models used in car industry design who has worked across Europe, most recently for Skoda in the Czech Republic. He was at a “stop the coup” demonstrat­ion last week in Coventry, the city whose outskirts include Warwick University’s leafy campus, to protest against the proroguing of parliament. Archer was among the 200 or so who showed up.

His latest job was cancelled as a result of the uncertaint­y over Brexit. His two adult sons feel their future is being settled without their say, with freedom of movement set to be discarded in the name of the “will of the people”. For Archer, Brexit is personal — his wife is German — but he still does not see any chance to roll it back.

“The problem is it’s divided the country so much there’s going to be no easy way around it,” he said as an autumn wind blew in the city’s Friargate. “Damage to the foundation of who we are, what we are has been done. It’s just damage control now.”

Bernard Capp, an emeritus professor of history at Warwick, has seen the university’s developmen­t from its earliest days in the 1960s and still teaches a class on radicalism and the English Civil War. He sees parallels with the sort of polarisati­on witnessed between 1640 and 1642, when the war broke out, and says that is a cause for concern.

During the civil war, Coventry was a parliament­arian centre, known for its extensive medieval city walls. Capp related that Charles I arrived in late summer 1642 on his way to raise an army, and demanded entrance. The mayor of Coventry refused, the first real act of defiance before the fighting started.

“We should all be wary because nobody wanted a civil war, nobody expected a civil war and look where that happened,” he said. Even at the war’s end, “no-one thought there would be a revolution and the king would get his head chopped off, and yet that’s where it ended up”, he said.

“So no-one knows what the final destinatio­n will be once you get into a constituti­onal crisis.” / Bloomberg

THE CRISES IN THE THREE KINGDOMS CONCUR; WHILE THE EMERGENT PRINT MEDIA’S ALARMIST HEADLINES MIRROR SOCIAL MEDIA POSTS

 ?? /Reuters ?? Chaotic: Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage is one of the main architects of the British vote to leave the EU. He has described the constituti­onal crisis as government battles to manage Brexit as the worst since the reign of Charles I.
/Reuters Chaotic: Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage is one of the main architects of the British vote to leave the EU. He has described the constituti­onal crisis as government battles to manage Brexit as the worst since the reign of Charles I.

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