Clean break from EU is needed to recover from virus impact
We fell off the cliff the moment lockdown started and now need to scale the economic heights, argues Brian Monteith
It is only a year ago today that I was waking up to the realisation that I had been elected as a Member of the European Parliament as a candidate for The Brexit Party.
The count for the elections, always held on a Sunday, following the vote on the previous Thursday, sent shock waves through the UK’S political system. Although of less importance than elections for Westminster or our devolved institutions, the outcome offered up existential shocks to the two main parties that very quickly changed the political landscape and altered the country’s route of travel. History was undoubtedly changed.
Following the national counts Theresa May’s Conservatives were in a state of apoplectic shock, coming fifth after their vote plummeted 15 points to less than 9 per cent. Labour, which in normal times might have been the beneficiary, lay prostrate after taking a similar hammering, losing eleven points to less than 14 per cent. From a standing start of launching only shortly before the elections The Brexit Party garnered more than 30 per cent of the votes. In comparison, the new pro-eu centrist party “Change UK” that had attracted well-known MPS from both the Labour and Conservative parties polled only 3.3;er cent.
Beyond the issue of honouring the European Union membership referendum held three years earlier by leaving the EU with or without a trade “deal” The Brexit Party did not campaign on any policies. This was in fact a strength, not a weakness, for what mattered most to my electorate was that I stood on a platform of respecting how they had voted in that referendum.
When I set up my street stalls I was humbled by the number of people – practically all of them volunteering they were former Labour voters – who came up to me to shake my hand or give me a bear hug and wish me the best. Others revealed how they had already voted for me, using a postal ballot no doubt set up by the Labour Party in previous elections (it was this information that convinced me Labour was doomed in their own heartlands).
Whenever I or fellow Brexit Party candidates gave speeches at rallies it was the lines about delivering on the referendum and upholding the democratic result that drew the loudest cheers. And while there were boos for any mention of May the greatest abuse was reserved for Jeremy Corbyn who many had voted for in the 2017 general election after he had committed to Brexit being delivered – but was now viewed as failing to do so. The arguments of the referendum were rarely repeated, what people wanted now was to be treated with respect.
These voters were now angry and disenchanted with democracy after being told their vote would count – then to be told their vote could not count because they did not know what they were voting for, but were ignorant, racist and bigoted.
The European Parliament election gave those voters the opportunity to send a message to the two main parties and to the political establishment that they could not be ignored, and they embraced it with both hands.
Now, as we are coming to terms of possibly some 60,000 excess deaths following our experience of the coronavirus pandemic this episode exactly a year ago possibly seems for most people like the distant past and in many ways irrelevant. What could be more important than reflecting on the current need to save lives?
Well, I have done much of that