The Denver Post

Britain’s tough call on the EU

- GEORGE F. WILL Washington Post Writers Group

london » ixty-five years ago, what has become the European Union was an embryo conceived in fear. It has been stealthily advanced from an economic to a political project, and it remains enveloped in a watery utopianism even as it becomes more dystopian. The EU’s economic stagnation — in some of the 28 member nations, youth unemployme­nt approaches 50 percent — is exacerbate­d by its regulatory itch and the self-inflicted wound of the euro, a common currency for radically dissimilar nations. The EU is flounderin­g amid mass migration, the greatest threat to Europe’s domestic tranquilit­y since 1945.

The EU’s British enthusiast­s, who actually are notably unenthusia­stic, hope fear will move voters to affirm Britain’s membership in this increasing­ly ramshackle and acrimoniou­s associatio­n. A June 23 referendum will decide whether “Brexit” — Britain’s exit — occurs. Americans should pay close attention because this debate concerns matters germane to their present and future.

The EU is the linear descendant of institutio­n-building begun by people for whom European history seemed to be less Chartres and Shakespear­e than the Somme and the Holocaust. After two world wars, or a 31year war (1914-1945), European statesmen were terrified of Europeans. Under the leadership of two Frenchmen, Robert Schuman and Jean Monnet, they created, in 1951, the European Coal and Steel Community to put essential elements of industrial war under multinatio­nal control.

This begat, in 1957, the European Economic Community, aka the Common Market. Money, said Emerson, is the prose of life. The EU is the culminatio­n of a grand attempt to drain Europe of grandeur, to make it permanentl­y peaceful by making it prosaic — preoccupie­d and tranquiliz­ed by commerce.

Britain’s Remain side is timid and materialis­tic, saying little that is inspiring about remaining but much that is supposedly scary about leaving. The Leave campaign is salted with the revolt-against-elites spirit now fermenting in nations on both sides of the Atlantic. The Remain camp relies heavily on dire prediction­s of economic wreckage that would follow Brexit — forecasts from the U.K. Treasury, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, etc. Although none of these, in spring 2008, foresaw the crisis of autumn 2008, they now predict, with remarkable precision, economic damage to Britain’s economy, the world’s fifth largest, if it is detached from the stagnation of the EU.

Passion is disproport­ionately on the Leave side, which is why a low turnout will favor Brexit: Leavers are most likely to vote. Current polls show Remain slightly ahead, but Leave has a majority among persons over age 43, who also are most likely to vote.

The most conspicuou­s campaigner for Brexit is Boris Johnson, the two-term Conservati­ve former mayor of London. He is an acquired taste, and some thoughtful people oppose Brexit because if it happens, Prime Minister David Cameron, who leads the Remain campaign, might be replaced by Johnson.

Brexit might spread a benign infection, prompting similar reassertio­ns of national sovereignt­y by other EU members. Hence June 23 is the most important European vote since 1945.

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