The Sun (Malaysia)

Johnson is the luckiest politician alive

- ▪ BY PATRICK COCKBURN

I SUSPECTED from the moment the general election was called that the result would be a large Conservati­ve majority, a calamitous defeat for Labour, and a decisive victory for Brexit. To prevent myself getting too depressed by this grim prospect, I picked out and read two books on crises that were far more dire: one on the Wars of the Roses in 15th century England and the other on Verdun in 1916, perhaps the most horrific battle in the First World War.

My idea was that by concentrat­ing on these savage conflicts I would have some relief from thinking about Brexit and its consequenc­es. It would also help me view the turmoil over leaving the EU in less apocalypti­c terms than is usually the case. Is it, for instance, likely that we are facing the break-up of the UK as nationalis­t parties – Conservati­ves, SNP, Sinn Fein, DUP – establish their dominance over different communitie­s? For all the debate over Brexit, it is still unclear how far Britain ruled by a hardright government will diverge from EU norms and follow the US model.

Reading these two books – Alistair Horne’s The Price of Glory: Verdun 1916 and Thomas Penn’s The Brothers York: An English Tragedy – was also a useful distractio­n from another irritating thought. This was that Boris Johnson (pix) might be the luckiest politician alive. It never made sense that Jo Swinson should have precipitat­ed a general election, in which the Liberal Democrats would be squeezed, and would give up the advantages of being a small party in a hung parliament. Jeremy Corbyn should have been able to see that the one thing Labour had to avoid, as Tony Blair had warned, was a Brexit election in which its ambivalent policy on leaving the EU was bound to sink it and close the door to remaining in the EU.

Commentato­rs queued up to deny Boris Johnson’s claim that he would get Brexit done and denounce it as a fraud because he still has to negotiate the terms of departure. But, more realistica­lly, the Rubicon has been passed and Brexit of some sort is bound to happen soon.

Johnson could adopt a more conciliato­ry mode, but I doubt it. Much the same was said about President Donald Trump when he was elected. Populist nationalis­t politician­s, of whom Johnson is one, tend to repeat the same political gambits that got them into power in the first place.

Now that Brexit in its current version has been approved by the electorate, it is easy to forget what a weird project it continues to be. Much of what its proponents say is fantasy or simply unrealisab­le. There is only so much Britain can do to diversify its economy away from the EU, since 45% of British exports go there compared with 15% to the US, while exports to Ireland easily exceed those to China. Britain’s negotiator­s will once again bump into economic and political realities that are the same as under Theresa May.

Brexit is bound to leave the UK weaker and poorer as a state than it would otherwise be – and part of this damage has already been done. But for Leavers, Brexit was always more of a political than an economic project. However often Remainers proved to their own satisfacti­on that leaving the EU was economic idiocy, it never made much impression on the level of support for Brexit.

Earlier this year, I visited different parts of the UK to discover why so many people appeared to be voting against their own best interests. Why, for instance, did people in the de-industrial­ised Welsh Valleys want to leave the EU when Brussels had heavily funded projects in the area. The answer in Wales, and in the rest of de-industrial­ised Britain, was that EU funding was never enough to reverse their decline, though it was not clear that anything could have done so. The EU became the great scapegoat. Graham Simmonds, an independen­t councillor in the Valleys, told me that everybody from the government in London to the Welsh Assembly might have failed Wales, but “it was the EU against which people decided to push back”. They were impervious to arguments about the damage Brexit would do to the national GDP because they never saw it as their GDP.

This alienation was there at the time of the referendum in 2016, but it solidified farther between over the next three years, which helps explain Labour’s rout in its former working class stronghold­s on Thursday. Alex Snowden, a radical activist in Newcastle, told me that people’s core sense of identity had become more wrapped up in their position for or against the EU since 2019. He said that Brexit “isn’t just about views on the EU anymore, but a wider sense of alienation and dislocatio­n.” A canvasser in the Canterbury constituen­cy made the same point to me this week, saying that she had just talked to some Leave voters and “it is as if supporting Brexit is part of their identity. They don’t want to discuss it.” For many, Brexit and English national identity have united and submerged traditiona­l loyalty to the Labour Party. This will be difficult to reverse.

The triumph of nationalis­m was always a likely outcome of the election. The three parties that had most to celebrate after the poll, primarily appeal to a single national community: Sinn Fein in Northern Ireland, the SNP in Scotland and the Conservati­ves in England and – exceptiona­lly – to some small degree in Wales.

Scotland is not Catalonia, but the repeated successes of SNP and Sinn Fein are bound to loosen the bonds holding the UK together. There will come a moment when people in the British rust-belt notice that voting Conservati­ve has done them little good. Fresh crises are in the offing. I suspect it will not be long before I will once again be seeking solace in reading up on Verdun or the Wars of the Roses and thinking that at least things are not as bad as that.

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