Chicago Sun-Times

Nationalis­t tensions in England mirror U. S.

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R LANE

The dust is just beginning to settle on Britain’s messy general election on Thursday, days before the country is to start complex negotiatio­ns on disentangl­ing itself from the European Union. Theresa May’s future as prime minister and leader of the Conservati­ve Party is openly in doubt, with Britain once again plunged into political turmoil.

It wasn’t supposed to be this way. The new prime minister inherited a sizable majority from David Cameron, who resigned the position last June after narrowly losing his bid to keep Britain in the European Union. May assured a campaign- weary nation that there was no need to call a general election — the slim majority ( 51.9 percent) voting in favor of leaving the EU gave her enough authority to begin the arduous process known as “Brexit.” Hoping to strengthen her majority and bargaining power, however, she reversed course and took a gamble on a new election.

May promised “strong and stable” leadership, but ran a colorless, error- prone campaign. Her majority vanished overnight, followed by frantic efforts to shore up a minority government with Northern Ireland’s right- wing Democratic Unionist party.

Doubts have been raised by both the EU and May’s own Conservati­ve Party over her ability to lead the negotiatio­ns and preside over a deal that will affect Britain and the EU for generation­s. She will almost certainly have to fend off strong leadership challenges precisely when she must settle such complex matters as the rights of EU citizens living in Britain, the renewal of a historical­ly fraught 310- mile land border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, and the politicall­y unpopular Brexit “bill” for payment of budget contributi­ons assured by her predecesso­r. Whether May will survive these challenges is uncertain.

The results of this latest election also raise larger questions about the nationalis­t populism that fueled Britain’s referendum on EU membership — a referendum that was profoundly divisive. It pitted urban voters against their rural counterpar­ts, and younger, largely pro- European voters against some of their Euro- skeptic, antiimmigr­ant elders.

To a large degree, those tensions mirror comparable divisions and polarizati­on in the U. S., both during and after last November’s presidenti­al election. The fault lines of both countries are set by immigratio­n, social and economic inequality, and a rejection of experts, elites, and the traditiona­l two- party system in favor of outsiders, populism and a desire to put nation first.

Thursday’s election in Britain suggests that voters are already having second thoughts about the consequenc­es of embracing such nationalis­t populism, in ways that mirror the collapse of Trump’s and the GOP’s approval ratings in the U. S. In Britain, support for the outsider ( and Russian- aided) UKIP or Independen­ce Party buckled on Thursday; poorer voters returned in droves to the Labour Party, historical­ly their strongest advocate. Meanwhile, voters of all stripes rebuked May’s belief that the slim referendum outcome authorized her push for a “hard” Brexit, perhaps even without a final deal with the EU. Compromise­s over trade and immigratio­n are necessary if Britain is to retain access to a trading bloc representi­ng almost 44 percent of its export market in goods and services.

In the U. S., a comparable rejection of extremism, isolationi­sm and polarizati­on is harder to measure, beyond those dismal approval ratings. Though such moves will be easier to detect in the 2018 midterms, second thoughts among voters already are evident from the surge of support for Democratic candidates in special elections from Montana, Virginia and Tennessee to Georgia and South Carolina.

The GOP — like Britain’s Conservati­ves — will soon have to decide whether to double down on nationalis­m or reject it as parochial, xenophobic, and tribalist. In France, voters facing that stark choice opted for liberalism, pluralism, and the internatio­nal order.

It is too early to know whether the nationalis­t populism stoked by a resurgent Russia has peaked in the West, but if the recent elections in France and Britain are any guide, the isolationi­sts who threw their lot in with the Trump administra­tion and “America First” may soon face equally catastroph­ic losses. Christophe­r Lane ( christophe­rlane. org) teaches at Northweste­rn University and is the author most recently of “Surge of Piety: Norman Vincent Peale and the Remaking of American Religious Life.”

 ??  ?? Theresa May
Theresa May

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States