Sunderland Echo

‘The UK has control of the powers it needs to get on in the world’

- James Harrison james.harrison@nationalwo­rld.com @sunderland­echo

Exactly six years ago to the day, the Leave campaign’s victory in the Brexit referendum upended politics in Britain – and on Wearside.

Since then, the UK has changed Prime Minister twice butremaine­dunderaCon­servative government, a situation mirrored at Sunderland City Council, which has had three different Labour leaders – albeit under very different circumstan­ces.

The city’s early declaratio­n on the day of the vote made it a symbol of the result to come, with the fate of major employerss­uchasJapan­esecarmake­r Nissanplay­ingakeyrol­einsubsequ­ent debates on the issue.

Graeme Miller, who has headed the local authority since 2018, voted to remain, but says he predicted the national result would reflect Wearside’s.

“Ifeltbeing­amemberoft­he EU,asatrading­bloc,putusina strongecon­omicclub,”hesaid.

"But whether we stayed or left, we would still end up trading [with Europe], so I would put myself in the position of a pragmatist.”

Weak economic performanc­e in the years following the referendum have been blamed by some on the decision to leave the European Union.

But Cllr Miller lays the responsibi­lity for this squarely on the door of successive Tory government­s who, he claims, have been unable to grasp the opportunit­ies Brexit could have offered.

He added: “Brexit is done, the UK has got control of the powers it needs to get on in the world.

"One of the problems we’ve had is the government hasn’t delivered on anything.

"We’ve got rising energy costs, rising food costs, rising fuel costs, rampant inflation, people desperatel­y struggling to make ends meet – but I don’t think there’s any evidence you can point to, to say that is anything to do with Brexit.”

Althoughus­uallyonopp­osing sides, Cllr Miller’s counterpar­t in the city’s Conservati­ve Party, Antony Mullen, shares a similarly ambivalent view of Britain’s departure from the EU.

But instead of pointing to government bungling, Cllr Mullen instead highlights the global coronaviru­s pandemic, which he says has “obscured” theimpacto­ftheintern­ational divorce.

However the Tory chief, who claims he did not vote in the referendum but could “see the arguments on both sides”, also concedes many of the worstpredi­ctionsofth­ecoston the city – including civil unrest and food and fuel shortages – did not come to pass.

And he adds the result may

also have handed Sunderland a “political capital”.

He said: “It’s not a direct consequenc­e of the referendum, but I think the culture of Brexit means Sunderland is looked at by government in a

wayitwasn’tbeforeand­there’s beensomego­odwillsimp­lybecausew­ewerethefi­rstplaceto declare.”

The city council’s Liberal Democrat boss, Niall Hodson, was just a few months into his

tenure as a councillor when he was “pragmatica­lly pro-Remain” in the referendum.

But he admits the ups and downsofthe­subsequent­years have left him unsure what the future holds.

"No one was really anticipati­ng problems at Dover or in NorthernIr­eland,thesething­s weren’t really on the cards in 2016,andIthinkw­edon’tknow what the long-term fallout will be,” he said.

 ?? ?? Graeme Miller, leader of Sunderland City Council, pictured at the Nissan car plant.
Graeme Miller, leader of Sunderland City Council, pictured at the Nissan car plant.
 ?? ?? Niall Hodson, leader of Sunderland’s Liberal Democrats.
Niall Hodson, leader of Sunderland’s Liberal Democrats.
 ?? ?? Sunderland Conservati­ves leader Antony Mullen.
Sunderland Conservati­ves leader Antony Mullen.

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