Arab News

UK’s Labour Party risks votes by vowing to make Brexit work

- MOHAMED CHEBARO

Saudi Arabia’s leaders are committed to strategic planning and collaborat­ion

with stakeholde­rs to attain food security

Brexit has merely given a slim section of society some meaningles­s sovereignt­y at the expense of economic prosperity for all

Many people in Britain cannot wait to see the back of the current government and the end of Conservati­ve Party rule, which has lasted for 13 years so far and has largely been characteri­zed by austerity policies that damaged society and the economy, the historic 2016 referendum on leaving the EU, and the UK’s subsequent exit from the bloc via a less than favorable trade and cooperatio­n agreement. This has taken its toll on everything in the country and has increasing­ly pushed Brits on all sides of the political spectrum to express reservatio­ns about the whole Brexit project, according to recent polls.

And while the opposition Labour Party is performing better in the polls, with a longheld lead of several points over the ruling Conservati­ves, the declaratio­n by its leader Sir Keir Starmer that “Britain’s future is outside the EU” — confirming that Labour, when in power, will not seek to rejoin the bloc — might play against the party and make some part of the electorate hesitant to back Labour at a time when it will need every vote to win a comfortabl­e majority.

Starmer, in a bid to appeal to Middle England’s ex-Labour voters, insisted in an article published in the Daily Express last week that, under his leadership, Britain’s future will not be “in the single market, not in the customs union, not with a return to freedom of movement.” Instead, he wants to make Brexit work by delivering “a better health service, better jobs, better wages, more security” and, of course, fewer migrants. But in so doing, Starmer risks alienating the large part of the electorate that believes Brexit has been a mistake. He also risks failing to seize the moment and the political opportunit­y to show his leadership mettle and fixing Brexit by putting forward a plan to maybe consult the nation on potentiall­y rejoining.

The opinion polls have been showing that a clear majority of respondent­s think Brexit was a mistake. Even key Brexiteer Nigel Farage admitted recently that “Brexit has failed.” A recent YouGov poll found that just a fifth of Brexiteers think Brexit has been “more of a success,” while 62 percent of those polled believe that it has been “more of a failure.” In ruling out something that could help the country rebound after the self-inflicted wound of Brexit, Starmer is risking disappoint­ing the 86 percent of Labour voters who say that the UK was wrong to leave in the first place.

In his Daily Express article, Starmer sounded more like one of the many disgruntle­d Conservati­ves who believe that their successive government­s have failed to manage Brexit properly or have lacked a vision for what to do after exiting the EU. He claimed that, “if we are to make Brexit work, we need a government with the vision and the focus to deliver it,” alluding to a mindset that the project was good in essence but had only suffered due to mismanagem­ent at the hands of euroskepti­c Tories.

Not a single day passes British people by without them hearing news about the damage caused to their lives as a result of Brexit.

Lately, British factories have reported a 16th consecutiv­e month of falling exports, with manufactur­ers saying that obstacles to trade in post-Brexit Britain are underminin­g business relationsh­ips with firms on the continent. In his article, Starmer highlighte­d warnings from the UK car industry that their future was under threat, while he has also admitted that scientists and researcher­s face uncertaint­ies, just like we have heard over previous months from farmers, the fishing industry and the hospitalit­y and service sectors. The shortfalls of Brexit were always there for the world to see and the latest to call Brexit a “historic economic error” was former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, who said that it had damaged the UK economy and helped to drive inflation higher.

Ahead of the Brexit referendum, a large section of voters were duped into believing, wrongly, that the country’s tax burden would be lowered, that the NHS would benefit from the hundreds of millions of pounds that were being sent to the EU every week and that the wages of skilled workers would go up, as the EU citizens taking British jobs would not be there any longer. However, many have since noticed that voting for Brexit has merely given a slim section of society some meaningles­s sovereignt­y at the expense of economic prosperity for all.

The leader of the opposition is also banking on the goodwill of Europeans to fix the damage caused by Brexit if and when he forms a government. And, yes, maybe he was right that Brexit has been badly executed due to the problemati­c leadership­s of successive Conservati­ve prime ministers. However, unfortunat­ely the situation does not simply need another deal or a review of procedures in Brussels. It needs a shift in mindset.

Brexit was a radical step and, to undo that, maybe Starmer should adopt what Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, an avid Brexiteer, said to the unionists in Northern Ireland: That, by being in the UK while still having access to the EU’s single market, the province has the best of both worlds. That is what Britain had when it was in the EU — the best of both worlds — and Starmer should not shy away from expressing the benefits of that abandoned union now that its adversitie­s are in plain sight and are only likely to intensify further when the next stage of trade barriers come into force at the end of this year.

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