The National - News

With Brexit looming, Britain is looking for new Commonweal­th allies

- SHOLTO BYRNES Sholto Byrnes is a senior fellow at the Institute of Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies Malaysia

When the leaders of 53 countries, representi­ng 2.4 billion people – about a third of humanity – and coming from states such as Britain, India and South Africa, gather for several days of discussion­s, dinners and forums, you might expect the world to take notice.

That is not always the case with the biannual Commonweal­th Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM). The organisati­on might be, according to the British peer Lord Howell, “a latticewor­k of connection­s unmatched by any other world institutio­n or network” but it is often dismissed as a talking shop, while its own secretaria­t’s staff have sometimes been quite rude about how effective it actually is.

But this week’s CHOGM in London is a big deal for Britain’s Theresa May, who in the run-up was busy trying to cajole as many heads of government to attend in person rather than send representa­tives. And the reason for that, of course, is that “Global Britain” is going to be looking for new partners – and sharpish – once it leaves the European Union.

The Commonweal­th, an anglophone collection of mostly former British colonies headed by the Queen, is the obvious answer to how the UK will prosper when it inevitably ends up with a trading relationsh­ip with the EU inferior to the one it enjoys as a member.

There is still a lot of residual anglophili­a in much of the Commonweal­th. Some of this is focused particular­ly on the Queen and while Prince Charles is likely to succeed her as its head, the role is not hereditary. Neverthele­ss, the UK is lucky enough to enjoy wells of goodwill towards Britain and the British in its former colonies. But this alone is far from being enough to assume a success can be made of this strategy.

Firstly, it should not be forgotten that the UK did choose the then European Economic Community over the Commonweal­th back in 1973. There may be few who still feel strongly that this was “an abrupt betrayal… Britain turned its back on its allies overseas”, as an Irish Times commentary put it after the Brexit vote in 2016.

So secondly, if Britons think they can just turn on the charm and dazzle with royal pomp and, lo and behold, the Commonweal­th will miraculous­ly become “Empire 2.0”, as the former Labour cabinet minister Peter Mandelson put it, they are “living in a fool’s paradise”. (Not that anyone would want to create Empire 2.0 anyway).

Commonweal­th countries made their own ways once the UK joined Europe. While many would welcome the organisati­on assuming a greater role, the UK will have to make a much more tempting offer for them to commit seriously to the kind of trade deals the Brexiteers have pinned part of their hopes on.

The Institute of Directors’ Allie Rennison made this point earlier this week when she wrote that “the UK will have to talk to New Delhi about easing restrictio­ns on work visas if it is serious about a trade deal, and so it should”. I would agree. But then I have always been one of those Euroscepti­cs who felt that being in the EU meant that we were discrimina­ting in favour of Europeans and against countries with which we had strong historical ties.

Allowing a larger number of Indians, Africans or – let’s be honest – any non-white people into Britain would, however, not please the large anti-immigratio­n crowd.

Personally, I would applaud it. One could even argue that, as the former imperial power, Britain still has obligation­s to the countries it ruled and whose natural and human resources it exploited. But it would take both bravery and dexterity for any British politician to announce, let alone implement, such a policy.

The UK also has to wake up to the fact that it is not the “British” Commonweal­th and that has not been its name for a very long time – since 1947, in fact. There has to be an acknowledg­ement that, while Britain might be a leading state in the Commonweal­th, it should be no more than “first among equals” at most and even that is not defensible for long.

In the near future the organisati­on has to develop a more collegiate leadership. It might be sensible, for instance, to make the British monarch its patron – maybe one of several – and create a rotating executive chairmansh­ip that would be filled by leaders from other nations.

There can also never be a repetition of the 1987 CHOGM when Britain’s then prime minister Margaret Thatcher stood stubbornly against the whole of the rest of the Commonweal­th over imposing sanctions on apartheid South Africa.

I wish the Commonweal­th well. Any organisati­on that brings countries together from around the world and helps them understand each other and celebrate what they have in common, rather than let divisions based on ignorance, colour or creed fester, is to be welcomed.

But if leading Tories think of it as a British club that they let slip into irrelevanc­e for decades but can now revive to suit their own interests, they are sorely mistaken. If, on the other hand, they are prepared to be realistic, generous and seriously committed, there could be much to be gained, including enhanced trading relations, by all the countries that are a part of the Commonweal­th, and not just the UK.

The question is: do UK politician­s view the Commonweal­th solely as a vehicle for their own national self-interests? Or does Global Britain have the courage and vision to act truly globally?

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