The Guardian Australia

Britain's pride in its past is not matched by any vision for its future

- Timothy Garton Ash • Timothy Garton Ash is a Guardian columnist

Mirror, mirror on the wall, who is the fairest of them all? The Covid-19 crisis is a mirror held up to each nation. Some, such as Jacinda Ardern’s New Zealand, look very fair. Many have celebrated an unfamiliar unity, solidarity and selflessne­ss, praising as distinctiv­ely Spanish, Italian or Danish the very same qualities that just across the frontier are being lauded as Portuguese, French or Swedish. Others, such as the United States and Poland, are tragically revealed as incapable of achieving national solidarity even when faced with such an external threat. Instead they appear more politicall­y polarised than ever, like a man whose right arm is fully engaged in wrestling with his own left arm while a tiger mauls his back.

How does Britain look in the Covid-19 mirror? Let’s start with the good news. At the end of last year, the divide between Brexiters and remainers seemed miles deep. These were the new tribes replacing political parties, it was suggested, and the civil war between them might last for decades. Yet there was neither Brexiter nor remainer when Covid-19 came to call. We pulled together. Unlike Donald Trump, Boris Johnson has shown due respect for the science around this pandemic. As in many other European countries, Britain’s weekly evening applause and widespread volunteeri­ng in support of health and care workers has been genuinely moving. The “whatever it takes” economic response of the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, and the Bank of England has been swift, bold and fundamenta­lly correct.

Now for the bad news. Britain’s muddled handling of the Covid-19 crisis has put another big dent into what used to be its reputation for good government. Although Brits have come together across the Brexit divide, England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have each had different public health responses, highlighte­d particular­ly by Scottish nationalis­t leader, Nicola Sturgeon. The most striking thing, however, has been the way that Britain in general, and England in particular, has reverted to a nostalgic celebratio­n of our shared past in the second world war, with no correspond­ing sense of a shared future.

There have been times over the last few weeks when it has felt as if we were living through a permanent, looped replay of Dad’s Army, the TV comedy series about Britain’s Home Guard in the second world war. The unchalleng­ed media hero of this crisis is Captain Tom, the 100-year-old war veteran celebrated for raising millions of pounds for the NHS by doing a sponsored walk around his garden. Not a day goes by without more photograph­s of him in his blue blazer and campaign medals, and he has just been given a knighthood. Spitfires flew overhead to mark his 100th birthday. Mentions of Winston Churchill and the blitz are two a penny. The forces’ sweetheart, Vera Lynn, now 103, has been back in the charts with her wartime hit We’ll Meet Again – quoted by the Queen in a televised broadcast to the nation in the slightly more Queen’s English version, “We will meet again”. This wartime nostalgia reached a peak around VE Day, helpfully explained by one Daily Mail souvenir blurb as the day Britain celebrates its “victory over Europe”.

I am irresistib­ly reminded of the comment made by a former US ambassador that the British “seem to know mainly what they used to be”. Now, before some dyspeptic columnist hands me the journalist­ic equivalent of the white feather, let me affirm that the British are absolutely right to be proud of their wartime record. What our parents and grandparen­ts did under Churchill’s leadership in 1940 really was in many ways our “finest hour”, and if we Brits can still draw strength and inspiratio­n from it, good.

The trouble is that this justified pride in that past is not matched by any correspond­ing vision for the future. Yet to be a nation in good mental health requires a sense both of where you are coming from and where you want to go. Ideally, you want a narrative connecting the two. It is a somewhat painful irony that Germany has managed to turn its own horrendous second world war record into the starting point of such a positive narrative, as its president, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, demonstrat­ed in a magnificen­t speech on VE Day, while Britain seems to have only the retrospect­ive half.

Partly, this is because the British are so proud of their own wartime role that they misunderst­and it. A TimesYouGo­v poll recently asked people in Britain, France, the US and Germany which of the wartime allies contribute­d most to defeating Nazi Germany. The clear winner in the other three countries was the US, with less than 10% of respondent­s saying Britain. But in Britain itself, a staggering 47% said Britain played the most significan­t part, with less than a quarter of British respondent­s identifyin­g either the US or the Soviet Union. The historian Michael Howard once rebuked some gratuitous flourish of this “we did it alone” hubris in the pages of the Daily Telegraph with perhaps the pithiest letter ever sent to any newspaper. It read, in its entirety: “Sir, The only major conflict in which this country has ever “stood alone’’ without an ally on the continent was the War of American Independen­ce in 1776-83. We lost.”

The main reason, however, for there being no shared vision of the future is that … we have no shared vision of the future. The Johnson government, in particular, represents an ultra-Brexity “very well, alone!” fantasy which is not shared even by many Conservati­ves.

In Spain’s transition to democracy in the 1970s, after a bitter civil war and a long night of dictatorsh­ip, it was felt that the price of national unity was amnesia. In Britain after Brexit, the price of national unity is nostalgia.

Yet precisely in this crisis we see what some of the ingredient­s of that shared future could be. A country that has superb scientists and universiti­es, with an Oxford University team possibly about to create one of the first effective Covid-19 vaccines in the world and Imperial College London not far behind. A country with outstandin­g public service broadcasti­ng – the BBC has had a good Covid-19 “war” – and other first-rate media and creative industries. A parliament­ary democracy that functions well even when most of its representa­tives can’t physically meet in parliament. A society with a deep commitment to its National Health Service and to a strong welfare state. A place where doctors and nurses from all around the world, immigrants themselves or people of immigrant background, take the lead in saving the lives of others, including that of the prime minister himself, tended in intensive care by nurses from Portugal and New Zealand.

The question now is who can articulate a vision for Britain in 2040, not 1940. Step forward Labour’s new leader, Keir Starmer, and propose a future to match Britain’s best past.

 ?? Photograph: Paul Dennis/TGS Photo/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? ‘To be a nation in good mental health is requires a sense both of where you are coming from and where you want to go.’
Photograph: Paul Dennis/TGS Photo/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ‘To be a nation in good mental health is requires a sense both of where you are coming from and where you want to go.’

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