Gulf News

Jeremy Corbyn must say ‘no’ to Brexit

Given the choice between the government’s Brexit deal, no deal and Remain, it will be greatly in the Labour leader’s interest to back Remain

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nsurprisin­gly, the Labour leadership in Britain is scathing of the government’s Brexit strategy, mocking the internal divisions and delusions that fuel ministeria­l statements. There is, though, one big problem with its attempt at mockery: Labour’s position on Brexit is more or less the same as the government’s. As far as it has a position, Labour also wants to have its cake and eat it. The party seeks to be out of the European Union (EU) by 2019 and yet have tariff-free “access” to the single market and the customs’ union.

Sometimes Labour does not rule out full membership of the single market and the customs’ union; sometimes it does. I fully appreciate the case for evasivenes­s in relation to Europe. Labour was so constructi­vely ambiguous at this year’s general election that it managed to attract angry Remainers and determined Brexiteers. Nor is there anything new in such evasivenes­s. In the mid-1990s, former prime minister Tony Blair managed to be in favour of the euro and opposed to it. More than 20 years earlier, Harold Wilson supported and opposed the United Kingdom’s membership of the EU depending on whether his stance would unite or destroy his party. Dissemblin­g over Europe is sometimes necessary. I even understand Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn’s reticence during the Brexit referendum.

Why should he have gone all out for a Remain vote that a mountain of commentato­rs would have hailed as a triumph for former prime minister David Cameron and former chancellor of the exchequer George Osborne, when he had deep reservatio­ns about the EU? But there are also phases in the eternal Europe saga when a party’s self-interest demands clarity. Labour has reached such a junction now. Virtually every time a senior front-bencher speaks out on the issue he or she is reduced to nervy incoherenc­e. Labour’s position is unsustaina­ble. It aches to expose the recklessne­ss of the Tories in relation to Brexit and plans to oppose some of the vast layers of Brexit legislatio­n that will overwhelm forthcomin­g parliament­ary sessions. Yet, it does not have a clear alternativ­e Brexit strategy.

The government is not wilfully heading towards a cliff’s edge. It is doing so because there is no alternativ­e route. Meanwhile, the EU will not allow the UK to leave the customs union and remain part of it, which is the government’s current fantasy position. A hard Brexit is unavoidabl­e. In reality, there will be only two options for Labour to contemplat­e over the next 12 months: the government’s version of Brexit or no Brexit.

Arguing with coherence and credibilit­y

At some point, Labour will have to choose one or the other. To be more precise, when the government puts its final deal to parliament, Labour will have to support or oppose it. As Labour has argued that no deal would be the worst of all outcomes and there would be no time for an alternativ­e Brexit to be negotiated, Labour would have to put the case for staying in the EU as a better option than the Brexit deal on the table. In order for them to have the freedom to contemplat­e such a position, Corbyn would need to raise the option of remaining in the EU sooner rather than later. Only then would shadow cabinet members be able to argue with coherence and credibilit­y.

Instead of their current position, which is “the government’s policy on Brexit is disastrous­ly damaging to the country and we would do something very similar”, the leadership could mount credible opposition. There is also a much more substantia­l case for Corbyn to raise the option of staying in the EU. Separately he is proposing a programme of radical change. Some of his policies address the concerns of those who have felt “left behind “in recent decades in much more practical ways than Brexit. But Brexit is sucking up the energies of Whitehall and will do so for decades.

Corbyn can argue genuinely that he has had more doubts about the EU than many of those who voted for Brexit, but that the referendum was not an endorsemen­t of the Tory Brexit deal that followed. Has Corbyn always been a supporter of Brexit who would therefore never contemplat­e arguing that to remain is a better option? He shares with his hero, the late Tony Benn, deep concerns about the accountabi­lity of the EU and regards the way it has treated Greece as emblematic of much that is wrong with the institutio­n. But I am told by close allies of Corbyn that the former Greek finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis, converted the Labour leader to the remain cause following a couple of long conversati­ons ahead of the referendum. Corbyn would do well to have another long conversati­on with Varoufakis soon. Given the choice between the government’s Brexit deal, no deal and Remain, it will be greatly in Corbyn’s interest to back Remain.

Steve Richards is a political commentato­r, broadcaste­r and author of The Rise of the Outsiders: How Mainstream Politician­s Lost Its Way.

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