Daily Record

Torcuil Crichton

Fox desperatel­y seeking to scapegoat the media

- follow @torcuil

GENERALLY, when politician­s start attacking the media it is a sure sign that they are losing the argument.

So when Liam Fox, the biggest Brexiteer out of East Kilbride, perhaps the only one, claimed yesterday that “some elements” want the UK to fail in negotiatio­ns with Brussels, it had the aroma of a desperate, sweaty summer shirt about it.

Remember Andrea Leadsom’s recent claim that broadcaste­rs should be more “patriotic” during Brexit?

That gave me the same uncomforta­ble feeling as the Scottish Government “contacting” the boss of Highland Spring after he made less than compliment­ary remarks about a second independen­ce referendum, which were then retracted.

Cornered by critics, or even by reality, these who share more common nationalis­tic fervour than they’d care to admit, start drinking the Kool-Aid instead of bottled water in an attempt to silence anyone they view as less patriotic than themselves.

Fox, a trade minister idling in the shallows with no real job to do unless there is a hard Brexit, is desperate.

The vote has been won but the kind of Brexit he wants is still a far shore.

Fox fancies himself as a buccaneer on the high seas of free trade agreement, with Britain reborn as a mercantile nation plying the oceans of fortune.

In the wee hours of the night, the former defence minister might even dream of the Royal Navy’s two supercarri­ers as Britain’s enforcers in far-off oceans. Quick as they can be fitted, I suspect these carriers will be sent to far-off

BORIS Johnson is a bit crestfalle­n after a Tory fundraisin­g auction attracted just two bids for a private dinner with him.

The star lot at the Tories’ annual summer ball went for just £15,000, my local newspaper, the Evening Standard, reported.

Meanwhile, dinner with Theresa May attracted a string of bids and raised £160,000 – that’s more than a house is worth in many towns and works out at approximat­ely £1000 a word from the PM.

Mind you, those who have previously had dinner with “Maybot” would happily pay £160,000 not to ever have to repeat the experience.

oceans, to the Sea of China, helping the US try to maintain a fragile global dominance in Asia’s cauldron as the balance of power shifts eastwards. Squeezed by the trading power and military muscle of a burgeoning China and a protection­ist second-term Trumpian America (oh yes) Britain is going to be tossed on the waves like the balsawood Kon-Tiki raft.

Perhaps Fox can’t see that but most other people can. That is why big business, in the form of the CBI, is at last weighing into the Brexit debate, having been as mute as the millennial generation during the actual referendum campaign itself.

Last night, the CBI called for a slow transition out of the EU single market and the customs union, for which read business does not want to leave the biggest trading block in the world at all.

Combine that with EU Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier warning the same day that it would be impossible for the UK to have frictionle­ss trade with the EU if it left the single market and the skies darken for Brexiteers.

It may well be that the EU will offer Britain such a bad deal that the economic madness of leaving Europe will become apparent even to the Kool-Aid gang.

It may be that the combinatio­n of the awakened youth vote and the influence of business will sway the political mood and that (somehow?) Jeremy Corbyn will see the light on Europe too. Maybe.

A year on from the vote, Brexit still looks like the biggest act of economic self-sabotage a country could inflict on itself. The real patriots are the ones who will carry on saying it.

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 ??  ?? THAT’S YOUR LOT Boris Johnson is unhappy with the measly £15,000 he raised from wealthy Tories. Pic: Jonathan Brady/PA
THAT’S YOUR LOT Boris Johnson is unhappy with the measly £15,000 he raised from wealthy Tories. Pic: Jonathan Brady/PA

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