Yorkshire Post

It’ll take more than a Brexit deal to reunite our nation

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ONLY FOUR months remain before we walk arm-in-arm to the sunlit uplands where the easiest Brexit deal in history will have been made and everybody will be happy – except we know that this is not the case.

Others will concentrat­e on the details of the deal – a word I loathe because it reduces an existentia­l question simply to a matter of trade and transactio­n – and the position in which it leaves us.

I want to pick up on one line of the Prime Minister’s statement to the House of Commons last week: “If we get behind a deal, we can bring our country back together and seize the opportunit­ies that lie ahead.”

I asked in the short debate in the Lords if the promise to bring our country back together was credible and achievable and, if so, how it was to be done. The answer from the Minister was simply a repetition of mantras about the deal.

I thought I was being helpful to the Government by inviting a response such as “the country is split down the middle and the language and behaviour around Brexit have become toxic even in this Parliament, so it is not going to be easy to reconcile people and parties in the wake of such a divisive issue but, in acknowledg­ing the size of the task, we intend to pay attention in due course to the language, symbolism and mechanisms of reconcilia­tion”.

This is the challenge here.

The Government, by virtue of being the Government, has a primary duty to pay attention to such reconcilia­tion: to the healing of relationsh­ips that have been fractured by this process and the restoratio­n of trust as a public value.

I am not making a case for leaving, remaining, wishful thinking or dreaming.

The referendum happened and the rest is history, or at least history in the making.

However, the factual phenomenon of Brexit – its language and behaviours, its polarising aggression and its destructiv­e reductioni­sm – will not be addressed by statements about getting behind a deal and people romantical­ly falling back into line.

That line has been crossed in our public discourse and I think two things have exacerbate­d it: first, the repeated implicatio­n that the “will of the people” is immutable and clear; and, secondly, the fact that the nature of the split down the centre of the United Kingdom is being ignored.

This raises a question of honesty – honesty with the people of this nation.

To ask for honesty is not to accuse anyone of dishonesty, but we hear little or no acknowledg­ment of the fracture that polarises our people: a fracture that will be neither addressed nor healed by the repetition of mantras about a glorious future.

This is not about Brexit as a choice; rather, it is about Brexit as a cultural phenomenon and what has happened as a consequenc­e of the referendum.

Social media is not the most edifying place to seek enlightenm­ent and calm reflection – you have to wade through acres of muck to find any gems.

But where the gems are to be found is precisely where adults behave like adults: they face reality, whether or not reality reflects their own preference­s; they moderate their language in order to prioritise relationsh­ips and values over conflict; and they show a willingnes­s to listen before speaking and an ability to look through the eyes of their interlocut­or.

I admire the committed resilience of the Prime Minister and the remarkable expertise of our civil servants, but I appeal again for those engaged in this debate to take seriously the language of the discourse, not least in how we speak of those in the EU with whom we deal.

I appeal again to the Government not to dismiss with easy words the crying need for an honesty in discourse that sets people free to grow up and own the truth about the deep challenges that we face, and to offer the people to whom we are accountabl­e, and whom we are called to serve, a model for reconcilia­tion and hope.

Whatever happens, the Church is committed to stand with and serve those who suffer, especially the poor, marginalis­ed and disenfranc­hised people in our communitie­s, but we need an articulati­on of political vision that goes beyond economics and trade.

So what will those in power do to offer language and symbols of reconcilia­tion and hope in practical ways that recognise the divisions and take seriously the need to bring our country and our Union back together?

 ??  ?? After the division and anger and toxic language surroundin­g Brexit, Theresa May’s Government must address the challenge of bringing us back together.
After the division and anger and toxic language surroundin­g Brexit, Theresa May’s Government must address the challenge of bringing us back together.
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