Gulf News

Brexit a big opportunit­y for May

If as PM, in a time of massive change, she hasn’t yet formed her own ideas and has few conduits to new ones, she will be a victim of old orthodoxie­s

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ven before her first Cabinet meeting as Prime Minister, in July, Theresa May said: “We will not allow the country to be defined by Brexit.” The point she was making seemed sensible: She wanted to talk about lots of other important things too, such as education, skills and social mobility. Neverthele­ss, I think she made a mistake, which is becoming clearer over time.

First, her aim is pointless, since the country under her administra­tion will be defined by Brexit, whether she likes it or not. She will carry it off well or badly — or, just conceivabl­y, not at all — and by that she will be judged.

Second, Brexit is an enormous thing. You can’t imagine George Washington, having become first president of the United States in 1789, telling the American people that independen­ce was great, but now it was time to talk just about taxes and infrastruc­ture. He would have understood that his overarchin­g task was to make the new republic work. Brexit isn’t quite that big, but it’s big enough.

The task of becoming a self-governing country once again should organise the way government thinks about most other things. It’s not just a complex negotiatio­n: It’s the establishm­ent of a new identity, or at least the recovery of an old one.

Third, May’s wish to avoid definition by Brexit discloses her own unease, maybe even confusion on the subject. She was a Remainer, though not an ardent one, and she has never had to argue for Brexit at the ballot box. We still don’t know whether she sees Brexit as a necessary, but irksome, task like, say, getting rid of Britain’s African colonies in the 1950s or as the great national opportunit­y of our times.

The fact that she wants to put it in a special file by itself suggests the former. Britain will win more victories if it is the latter. Does she see her task as transformi­ng the country to deal with the change which, as she herself announced in her party conference speech, is coming? Or is she, in the phrase she likes to use in another context, “just managing” it? This unease expresses itself in her decisions and indecision­s.

Last week’s Autumn Statement by Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Hammond, was presented in terms of helping the right sections of society, but it is better understood as an insurance policy to cover what May and Hammond see as a very tricky two or three years. Whatever the merits of the statement, it was not visionary. Or take early dealings with US Presidente­lect Donald Trump. As the political beneficiar­y of the Brexit decision, May has the chance to range herself with the changebrin­gers in the free world, not with the status quo. She did not need to buy Trump’s whole bag of tricks, but she could have been ready to get alongside him — embracing a likely trading alliance with a waxing power, against EU rivals in a waning one. Instead, she looked as if she had sucked a lemon.

Trump accordingl­y mocked her by expressing his love for Nigel Farage, the United Kingdom Independen­ce Party leader. Or take the Article 50 legal case, which is now heading for the Supreme Court. The prime minister and the Lord Chancellor should have been instant in defending the integrity of the judges, but tougher in thinking through and publicly expounding the government’s legal case.

At present, her style and her advisers are transferre­d from her time at the Home Office, where she was famous for control. Her two closest aides are able people, but they are a bit like Richard Nixon’s famous pair, Ehrlichman and Haldeman, who were known as the “Berlin Wall” for their ability to cut the president off from others. If a prime minister, in a time of massive change, has not yet formed her own ideas and has few conduits to new ones, she will be the victim of the old orthodoxie­s. Sure enough, up pop ex-prime ministers — and one recent ex-deputy prime minister. Former prime minister Tony Blair wants to help (“Let’s just keep our options open”). Sir John Major warns against “the tyranny of the majority”. Nick Clegg conjures up an exciting new bogey, “the Brexit elite”, which must be countered.

It all reminds me of Ted Heath in about 1980 warning eloquently, egotistica­lly and misguidedl­y that if only we could revert to his economic policies, which had quite recently collapsed, all would be well. Former prime minister Margaret Thatcher could rebut the seductive arguments of the oncemighty because she had something new to offer. Does May? Charles Moore is an English journalist and a former editor of the Telegraph.

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