Edmonton Journal

PALL OVER U.K. REFERENDUM

Killing of British MP leaves nation in shock

- Joseph Brean

The final week of Britain’s referendum campaign on its future in Europe was shaping up to be an undignifie­d, theatrical farce.

Then came Thursday and the first assassinat­ion of a British politician since a bombing murder by the Irish Republican Army in 1990.

Jo Cox, 41, a Labour Party MP and passionate advocate for Syrian refugees, was stabbed and shot as she left a meeting with constituen­ts at a library in West Yorkshire.

Her alleged killer Thomas Mair, 52, a local man, unemployed for many years, is reported to have shouted “Britain first” as he attacked her, before being tackled and arrested.

As slogans go, this would be like shouting “Make America Great Again.” The words are innocent, but they conceal a roiling nationalis­t, protection­ist, nativist anger that is rising quickly in political influence, taking the establishm­ent by surprise.

“The campaign has been incredibly negative on both sides, everybody stressing threats and dangers,” said Harold Clarke, the Canadian editor of Electoral Studies and professor of political economy at the University of Texas at Dallas, who researches polls, elections, referendum­s, and the political climate that moves them.

Citing extensive polling, Clarke described a rising populist sense among mostly white, working-class Britons that the “world has passed them by.”

All that is contained in “Britain First.” The slogan speaks of fear of losing control over immigratio­n on a crowded island, or shifting economic threats, or loss of blue-collar jobs to cheap foreign labour. It speaks of the loss of national and personal security, from street crime to terrorism. And it reflects a fear that Britain’s language, culture and religious heritage are being overrun and replaced by foreign influence — and not just foreign, but European, that great cultural other against which the British define themselves.

This is what inspires the Leave side, which has risen in the polls in recent weeks, and now is at least equal with Remain, possibly even a few points ahead.

It shows itself in three main movements: the mainstream Conservati­ve euroskepti­cs; the barely disguised racist thuggery of the British National Party, whose slogan is “putting Britain first;” and the milder, nostalgic, jamt-arts-and-hedgerows nationalis­m of Nigel Farage’s U.K. Independen­ce Party.

The spectrum between them is wide, but these movements are united in fearing loss of control over courts, sovereignt­y, even democracy, and seeing it replaced by unelected star chambers in Brussels, under the economic hegemony of Germany.

A number of U.K. politician­s and European leaders on Friday called for the vitriol in the campaign to be toned down.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel called on both sides of the EU referendum campaign to “set limits” and treat each other with “respect” following the murder of Cox. Merkel warned of the “exaggerati­ons and radicaliza­tion” in politics.

Yvette Cooper, a former Labour minister, said that “vitriol” in the EU referendum debate could be “very destructiv­e.” Tim Farron, the Liberal Democrat leader, said he was “fed up with the anger and the hatred” in the debate about the EU.

As tributes were paid all over the country to Cox, Prime Minister David Cameron said: “Where we see hatred, where we find division, where we see intoleranc­e, we must drive it out of our politics and out of our public life and out of our communitie­s.”

However, even the location of the murder is rich with nationalis­t symbolism. It happened in Birstall, in the post-industrial north of England, between gritty Leeds and Bradford, the home riding of noted political wacko George Galloway, site of famous race riots, and almost a byword for the uneasy assimilati­on of Asian Britons, such as the 7/7 London Undergroun­d bombers, all of whom grew up nearby.

Referendum­s like the EU one are known as “polity shaping events,” meaning they shape political systems rather than decide one specific issue. Much is wrapped up in either answer, Leave or Remain.

The last British one, the 2014 Scottish referendum, was similarly conducted in a climate of fear, and fear won the day.

To secede, for Scotland, was to risk being alone on the turbulent seas of a global economy, with a new and vulnerable currency, and not much more than an oil industry to stay afloat. To stay was to enjoy the support of the United Kingdom and its pound sterling. The subsequent collapse in oil prices, in hindsight, made the Scottish independen­ce seekers seem reckless. Fear, in this case, had been wise.

This time, though, fear is looking ever more unhinged. For Leave, the ballot question seems less economic, more existentia­l. It cuts deeper into the British identity, as if the argument is happening within the soul, not the mind.

For its part, the Remain side has acted much like the federalist side in the 1995 Quebec referendum, Clarke said, offering “practical and prudential” arguments, basically saying Britain is better off economical­ly if it stays in, hoping to appeal to head over heart.

In this context, Cox’s murder is likely a “pulse-decay phenomenon,” he added, meaning it will have a strong, but quickly dissipatin­g impact on voting intention.

Had it happened a month ago, it would likely be irrelevant. But with only a few days to go, it could be much more significan­t.

Just before the shooting, and seeking to move the vote in its final week, Farage and UKIP released a poster ad that shows a massive line of Syrian migrants, overwhelmi­ngly young men, with the slogan “Breaking Point.”

Now, with a young mother dead, a political career ended by a criminal outrage, and a nation in shock at the anger within, that poster has turned out to be sickeningl­y ironic.

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 ?? DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Floral tributes and candles are laid in remembranc­e of slain British MP Jo Cox in front of the Houses of Parliament in London on Friday.
DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Floral tributes and candles are laid in remembranc­e of slain British MP Jo Cox in front of the Houses of Parliament in London on Friday.

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