Daily Mail

BRAINS FOR BREXIT!

Nailing the calumny that Leave voters are stupid, Cambridge academics launch ...

- By Jack Doyle Executive Political Editor

MORE than 40 of the country’s top thinkers have launched a pro-Brexit campaign to fight the tide of Remain ‘propaganda’.

Leading economists, lawyers, philosophe­rs, historians and social scientists want to challenge the impression all academics oppose leaving the EU.

The group, which includes Remain voters, has criticised the contempt shown by those seeking to reverse the referendum result who regard large numbers of Leave supporters as ‘unworthy of considerat­ion’.

Trying to overturn that vote ‘would outrage democratic sovereignt­y, cause dangerous and lasting dissension, and make the United Kingdom an internatio­nal laughing stock’, they said.

A new website, briefingsf­orbrexit.com, will challenge ‘ ludicrous’ claims about the economic consequenc­es of leaving.

It is the brainchild of two Cambridge academics, the historian Professor Robert Tombs and the economist Dr Graham Gudgin.

Other figures who have signed up to the project include former MI6 chief Sir Richard Dearlove, the Labour peer Lord Glasman, the Oxford law professor Dr Richard Ekins and Baroness Ruth Deech, the former chairman of the Human Fertilisat­ion and Embryology Authority, The Sunday Times reported.

Dr Gudgin, an emeritus professor at the Judge Business School at the University of Cambridge, and Professor Tombs, emeritus professor of French history at Cambridge and the author of The English And Their History, both voted in favour of entering the Common Market in 1972, but backed Leave in the referendum, concerned about centralisa­tion of powers in Brussels. Professor Tombs said: ‘To every crisis that comes along, the answer is always more centralisa­tion, never less.’

Dr Gudgin said he came up with the idea for the website ‘during one of those terribly pessimisti­c weeks. When Theresa May wasn’t going to last until teatime and there was definitely going to be a second referendum.

‘Together we thought, “Gosh, we ought to be better organised than at the last referendum”.’ He added: ‘Nobody who appears on the BBC and says “this is going to be a catastroph­e” is ever asked what their view is based on.’

Professor Tombs said his motivation was the ‘ whole tide of propaganda about how awful everything was, how awful everything was going to be, and we didn’t believe this.

‘We realised quite a lot of other people didn’t believe it either.’ They criticised the contempt shown by many Remainers to those who voted Leave.

Professor Tombs said: ‘Graham and I have working-class or lower middle-class background­s. I do feel you just can’t write off a large part of the population as being unworthy of considerat­ion.’

He said he voted Leave because he feared the EU would break up or become ‘ much more centralise­d,’ adding: ‘We’ve seen how that works in Italy and Greece: A political choice is defeated by sheer weight of economic pressure – if you do this, your currency or economy will collapse.

‘I don’t think that would last and I don’t see how it could have a good end. I don’t think we either want to be, or ought to be, a party to that.’

Professor Tombs said his research found that the narrative of the decline of post-imperial Britain in the mid-20th century – one of the driving forces behind the decision to join the EU – was a myth. ‘I think, speaking as a historian and as a patriot, we were taken into the EU on a misunderst­anding of our situation,’ he said. ‘It would have been better in the 1960s and 1970s to continue to ask for a free trade agreement.

‘ I don’t think most people understood the full implicatio­ns of what we were signing up to politicall­y.’

Their analysis of British growth in per- capita GDP since 1952 showed it was better before we joined the bloc than after. Dr Gudgin said recent Government figures which purported to show huge falls in growth in most regions of the EU after Brexit were ‘ludicrous’.

He led a team of academics who proved that the assumption­s behind the Project Fear papers produced by the Treasury before the referendum were wrong, and failed to take account of the fact that Britain was almost the only EU state that had more trade outside the EU than inside.

He criticised its ‘ extreme assumption­s’ which led the Treasury to ‘an exaggerate­d estimate of the impact of Brexit’. The two academics said there was a rush of interest from other researcher­s after their project was conceived – but some Brexiteer academics were afraid to go public for fear it would hit their promotion prospects. Many universiti­es get a lot of money from the EU, leading to many academics taking a ‘narrow, corporatis­t view’.

Dr Gudgin said: ‘ One of our contributo­rs said he was told by a younger pro-Brexit colleague that his professor had told him that people who voted Brexit were the sort of people who sent his relatives to concentrat­ion camps.’

Professor Tombs added: ‘I thought one thing we academics were paid to do was help explain things to people, but universiti­es have become so simple-minded about this.’

FROM sneering ‘ comedians’ on dreary BBC panel shows to profession­al europhiles like Tony Blair and Nick Clegg, Remainers love to trumpet what they see as their intellectu­al superiorit­y over those who support Brexit.

They characteri­se working class Leave voters as either too stupid or gullible to understand the issues at stake, or so bigoted that all they care about is keeping out foreigners. And prominent Brexiteers – especially if they also happen to be Tory, such as Boris Johnson and Michael Gove – are derided as Little Englanders, liars and fantasists.

But the latest group to join the pro-Leave camp is set to expose these patronisin­g claims for the palpable fiction they are. Calling itself Briefings for Brexit, it comprises around 40 leading academics in fields including economics, law, history, philosophy, science and politics, plus several diplomatic experts, a Labour peer and a former head of MI6.

They have come out of the shadows because they are sick of Leave supporters being dismissed as idiots and ‘the whole tide of propaganda about how awful everything was going to be’.

In a calm, dispassion­ate manner they hope to redress the balance and demonstrat­e that, far from being evidence of stupidity, wanting to leave the EU is the best and most rational choice.

Worryingly, they say many more like-minded academics would have joined them, but because the university establishm­ent is overwhelmi­ngly pro-Remain they were afraid their careers would be blighted. What a chilling indictment of our higher education institutio­ns. Instead of encouragin­g free expression, they crush it.

But it’s clear the Remainers have lost the argument. Only yesterday a survey showed most UK companies now believe that, contrary to the dire warnings of Project Fear, Brexit will boost the economy. Isn’t it time the doom-mongers stopped talking Britain down?

The truth is that 17.4million people voted to leave the EU not because they’re stupid but because they no longer want to be shackled to a decaying, undemocrat­ic behemoth incapable of reforming itself.

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