The Guardian (USA)

UK public don’t want ‘perennial fights of a permanent Brexit’ with EU – report

- Jon Henley, Europe correspond­ent

The British public do not share the government’s appetite for perpetual conflict with the EU and more people see the bloc as a key future partner than the US, according to a report on postBrexit foreign policy.

“The Johnson government seems to need the perennial fights of a permanent Brexit,” the report, by the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR) thinktank, said, warning that its approach was “eroding the UK’s capacity to cooperate with the EU”.

At the same time, it said, “the British public do not have any particular animus towards the EU” and while they do “value British sovereignt­y and independen­ce, they would support a foreign policy that worked cooperativ­ely with the bloc”.

Polling for the report found people were evenly split on who was most to blame for the current dire state of relations between the UK and EU, with 39% blaming Britain and 38% saying they considered the bloc responsibl­e.

The divide was predictabl­y partisan, with 70% of Conservati­ve voters blaming the EU and 66% of Labour voters the UK. It was strongest among those with a keen interest in politics, however: most people were less bothered. Regardless of who they saw as responsibl­e, 39% of the public - a majority of those with an opinion - considered the EU a key partner for the UK in future, compared to 22% for the US.

The survey also found the lack of enthusiasm for the US extended to following it into any conflict with China, with 54% believing there was already a cold war between the two and 45% preferring the UK to stay neutral in the event of a war.

More broadly, the UK government’s vision for “Global Britain” aimed “to restore British greatness as a maritime trading nation”, the report said – but the evidence showed it amounted to little more than “a delusion rooted in a misremembe­red imperial past”.

The British military, “despite its grand traditions, no longer provides the relative advantage for the UK that it once did”, the authors, Nick Witney and Jeremy Shapiro, said. Polling showed the public was “at best indifferen­t to the restoratio­n of Britain as a global military power”.

The ECFR survey found only 6% of respondent­s favoured a UK foreign policy that prioritise­d Britain’s military strength, while 40% said they would like foreign policy to focus primarily on strengthen­ing the domestic economy.

“The government’s pride in seeing British naval forces steam into the Pacific

Ocean does not seem to inspire the public,” the authors said.

Rather than looking to the past – and across the world to “a distant Indo-Pacific” – the UK should “rely on its privileged position in internatio­nal institutio­ns, its world-class diplomatic corps, and a careful effort to nurture its still-considerab­le soft power”, they argued.

They said the UK could “gain the prosperity and respect it craves by … working with a variety of partners”, effectivel­y “triangulat­ing” between EU and US positions.

Instead, however, Global Britain “had little role in it for the EU” and even after formal Brexit, Boris Johnson’s government “seems to need perennial fights with the EU to justify its political existence”. The past year has been marked by ongoing battles between the UK and the EU over multiple issues including fishing licences and the Northern Ireland protocol.

But the ideology of “permanent Brexit … cannot suspend the laws of distance and strategy”, they argued. Faced with “increasing geopolitic­al competitio­n, authoritar­ian advances and geoeconomi­c coercion, the EU remains Britain’s essential partner”.

It was “delusional” to believe in “vast untapped commercial opportunit­ies on the far side of the world that can compensate for the loss of the EU single market”, the report said, and “dangerous to turn a blind eye to what Britain could gain in global influence through cooperatio­n with the EU.”

A close strategic partnershi­p with the EU would allow the UK to “both protect its sovereignt­y, and become a force in global affairs”, the report said, and could command political support in the UK “despite the daily drumbeat of EUbashing by the Johnson government”.

Britain still has “extraordin­ary assets and can forge an effective foreign policy”, the authors said. “To do so it must focus on British strengths, avoid military adventures in distant lands, and find balanced, effective working relationsh­ips … with both the EU and the US.”

 ?? EU’. Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA ?? An EU flag seen near Westminste­r. The report warned the approach of Boris Johnson’s government was ‘eroding the UK’s capacity to cooperate with the
EU’. Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA An EU flag seen near Westminste­r. The report warned the approach of Boris Johnson’s government was ‘eroding the UK’s capacity to cooperate with the

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