Otago Daily Times

UK casts off into postBrexit unknown

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LONDON: The United Kingdom left the European Union’s orbit on Thursday, turning its back on a tempestuou­s 48year liaison with the European project for an uncertain postBrexit future in its most significan­t geopolitic­al shift since the loss of empire.

Brexit took place at the strike of midnight in Brussels, or 2300 London time (GMT), when the UK ended the de facto membership, known as the transition period, which lasted 11 months after it formally left on January 31.

For five years, the frenzied gyrations of the Brexit crisis dominated European affairs, haunted the sterling markets and tarnished the UK’s reputation as a confident pillar of Western economic and political stability.

After years of Brexit vitriol, one of the most significan­t events in European history since the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union passed with little fanfare, the UK slipped away, serenaded by the silence of the Covid19 crisis.

Supporters cast Brexit as the dawn of a newly independen­t ‘‘global Britain’’, but it has weakened the bonds that bind England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland into a $US3 trillion ($NZ4.17 trillion) economy.

‘‘This is an amazing moment for this country,’’ Prime Minister Boris Johnson said in his New Year’s Eve message.

‘‘We have our freedom in our hands and it is up to us to make the most of it.’’

As EU leaders and citizens bade farewell, Johnson said there would be no bonfire of regulation­s to build a ‘‘bargain basement Dickensian Britain’’ and the country would remain the ‘‘quintessen­tial European civilisati­on’’.

But Johnson, the face of the Brexit campaign, has been short on detail about what he wants to build with Britain’s ‘‘independen­ce’’ or how to do it while borrowing record amounts to pay for the Covid19 crisis.

His 80yearold father, Stanley Johnson, who voted to remain in 2016, said he was applying for a French passport.

In the June 23, 2016, referendum, 17.4 million voters, or 52%, backed Brexit while 16.1 million, or 48%, backed staying in the bloc. Few have changed their minds since. England and Wales voted out but Scotland and Northern Ireland voted in.

The referendum showed a UK divided about much more than the EU, and fuelled soul searching about everything from secession and immigratio­n to capitalism, the legacy of empire and what it means to be British.

Leaving was once the farfetched dream of a motley crew of ‘‘euroscepti­cs’’ on the fringes of British politics. The UK joined in 1973 as ‘‘the sick man of Europe’’ and two decades ago British leaders were arguing about whether to join the euro. It never did.

But the turmoil of the euro zone crisis, attempts to integrate the EU further, fears about mass immigratio­n and discontent with leaders in London helped Brexiteers win the referendum with a message of patriotic, if vague, hope.

‘‘We see a global future for ourselves,’’ said Johnson, who against the odds clinched a Brexit divorce treaty and a trade deal, as well as the biggest Conservati­ve majority since Margaret Thatcher, in the 2019 election.

When the Great Bell known as Big Ben tolled 11 through a scaffold, there were few outward displays of emotion in Britain as gatherings are banned under coronaviru­s pandemic restrictio­ns.

After the UK leaves the Single Market or the Customs Union, there is almost certain to be some disruption at borders. More red tape means more cost for those importing and exporting goods across the EUUK border.

After haggling over a trade deal for months, the British Government published 70 pages of case studies just hours before its departure advising companies on what rules they would have to follow at the new UKEU border.

The Port of Dover expects volumes to drop off in early January. The most worrisome period would be in mid to late January, when volumes picked up again, it said.

Support for Scottish independen­ce has risen, partly due to Brexit and partly due to Covid19, threatenin­g the 300yearold political union between England and Scotland.

Scottish leader Nicola Sturgeon has said an independen­ce referendum should take place in the earlier part of the devolved parliament’s next term, which begins next year.

‘‘Scotland will be back soon, Europe. Keep the light on,’’ she said yesterday. — Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: VIA REUTERS ?? Done . . . Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson gives a thumbs up after signing the Brexit trade deal with the EU at 10 Downing St in London on Thursday.
PHOTO: VIA REUTERS Done . . . Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson gives a thumbs up after signing the Brexit trade deal with the EU at 10 Downing St in London on Thursday.

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