“The fabric of democracy is always fragile everywhere because it depends on the will of citizens to protect it, and when they become scared, when it becomes dangerous for them to defend it, it can go very quickly.” (Margaret Atwood)
The deadline for ending the “transitional” arrangements for Britain’s
relations with the EU is rapidly approaching, and as some predicted a
year or two ago, there is no sign of a meaningful agreement that will
provide a stable framework for future relations between the EU and UK.
The
depth of disagreement within the country over Brexit, where, according
to recent opinion polls the Remain vote is now higher than the Leave
vote, has even spread to the Bishops of the Church of England. In
September 2020, the College of Bishops for the Anglican church wrote:
“In writing, we affirm our respect for the June 2016 Referendum, and our belief that the result should be honoured.” (Church Times 4/10/20)
This
then sparked off a lively debate in the Church of England, including
interventions by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, who replied
in the Church Times, on October 10th 2020, that “to honour
or respect the referendum result is not to sign up to Brexit at any
cost.” For students of history, this sounds relatively mild stuff, until
it is realized that we are talking about an institution buried deep
within the British/English establishment. This debate shows that the
Church of England, along with much of the rest of British society,
remains deeply divided over Brexit. There are no signs of any healing
balm being applied by the Leave government to assuage the deep political
wounds experienced by Britain.
The implications of this debate go
much further and deeper. The Archbishop, using his position in the
House of Lords, severely criticized the government for breaking
international agreements with respect to Northern Ireland over future
border arrangements between the UK, Northern Ireland and the EU. And
Archbishop Welby was not alone, as the voting in the House of Lords on
the proposed Internal Markets Bill showed. The Bill was soundly defeated
in voting by their Lordships. All this passed relatively unnoticed,
since owing to our dysfunctional constitution no one much cares about
what the House of Lords says. It is however curious to say the least
that the “flag” of the Remain voters is not being waved more
energetically by any of the major political parties.
All this
suggests that although the attention of the pro-Brexit UK press is
currently fixed on Covid, one can see how the issues around Brexit
simply refuse to go away, and that deep scars within British society
persist over the issue. Indeed, it might be argued that it is becoming
easier to see how Brexit, the Leave campaign, and the “victory” of Mr
Johnson in the November 2019 General Election are all more closely
linked that some had thought. Brexit, in other words, is not an isolated
incident. Rather, or so it seems to this author, it is part of a
process that is undermining much of our modern democracy. And as our
political system creaks, so we gaze at the growth of cronyism (recent
NHS PPE contracts); efforts to break international treaties (Internal
Market Bill) and intimidate the civil service (resignations of several
high ranking civil servants); and supporting breaches of the ministerial
code regarding bullying (Priti Patel case). The list goes on, and it
looks more and more like the emergence of an authoritarian approach,
limited, for the time being, by its own incompetence.
The British
government has demonstrated strong anti-democratic tendencies since its
election in 2019, a year ago. The recent kitchen sink dramas within the
Prime Minister’s Office being yet a further example. There is the
infamous Dominic Cummings openly breaking the government’s own imposed
rules when driving across the country in the middle of the first Covid
lockdown. And as if the trip to Barnard Castle in Durham for eye testing
purposes was not enough, the PM proceeded to “pardon” him, just as he
has done with Ms Patel.
Not that this was sufficient to save the
eminence grise’s job. His combination of being rude to everybody,
despising MPs, and insisting that he knew best revealed the extent to
which the government of the country had been effectively taken over by a
revolutionary elite group of leaders and members of the Brexit Leave
campaign. As has happened at other times, it rapidly became obvious that
the narrow ideological platform espoused by the Leavers was a poor
basis on which to run the country, and in particular to deal with the
Covid crisis. Here, Britain’s performance has been arguably amongst the
worst in the G7 countries.
Lockdowns and ideology
The
Leave government has also struggled during the CV19 pandemic to accept
that there might be any medical or public health reasons for imposing
limits to what they consider to be basic freedoms, such as freedom of
movement, freedom to run a business, and freedom to infect as many
people as they like. The idea that there might be a “national” interest
that does not exclusively represent their views is something Leavers
seem to find particular difficulty in accepting.
This attitude is
reinforced by the assumption often found among the government’s
supporters that there is a dichotomy between the interests of social
protection and care and the interests of the economy. In their view the
costs of remedial social measures are too high, and outweigh the
unspecified benefits of saving lives. During Parliamentary and media
debates it is rarely mentioned that the countries with better economic
forecasts in 2020 are those which have been most successful in
controlling Covid, notably countries such as China, Taiwan, Vietnam,
Thailand, Singapore, South Korea and Hong Kong. Seen in this light, a
full economic recovery will only be possible when the several millions
of vulnerable and shielded voters feel sufficiently secure to pursue
their normal lives, free of the risk of catching Covid.
The
putting of the pro-Brexit interest ahead of the national interest can
also be seen in an act of unparalleled gerrymandering of the electorate
that occurred during the 2016 referendum. One of the crowning insults to
democracy exercised by the Leavers was in their successful
gerrymandering of the franchise for the 2016 referendum itself. At that
time there were 1.3 million UK citizens living in the EU, and nearly 2.4
million EU citizens living in the UK who were disenfranchised from the
referendum and subsequent political debates around EU membership. These
were people who had bet their lives on the continuing free movement of
people under the Treaty of Rome. There is little doubt that had these
groups been given the vote in the referendum, we would not now be facing
the prospect of any kind of Brexit at all.
Implications for the future of the UK
The
continued confusion over the future shape of UK/EU relations, combined
with the clearly stated government view that devolution is a “disaster”
strongly suggests the Leave ideology is plotting to reclaim much of the
powers the devolved administration have, with a view to reinforcing the
centralized power of Westminster government.
The deadly progress
of Covid has given the devolved administrations the chance to talk with
their own electorates, and to explain and justify how their local and
“national” Covid containment strategies differ from those applied across
the whole of England. One result of this has been that voters in the
devolved regions appear to trust their own governments more than they
trust the Leave government in Westminster.
Concerns about this,
and a rise in opposition to national lockdowns in the Tory party,
contributed to a change in policy at Westminster. Since the devolved
regions have responsibility for their own health care, Westminster’s
role is reduced to setting policy for England only. In this context,
Boris Johnson’s government decided, without seeking parliamentary
approval, to impose different levels of lock down on different regions
within England, rather than adopting a one size fit all approach to all
(except for the interlude in November 2020) . This then gave rise to the
unseemly spectacle of different English regions bargaining their
acquiescence to a local lockdown in return for getting government
financial support for their local industries and services.
The
government’s blank refusal to listen to the wishes of the devolved
regional governments on a range of issues, is contributing to the growth
in Scotland of views favouring a second referendum on independence from
England, and to rejoin/remain in the EU. Similarly, the Remain
majority in Northern Ireland may well now begin to press for a
referendum on the vexed border question with the Irish Republic, a step
that could lead to the reunification of Ireland. If this continues to
sound far-fetched, then we should recall in a little known episode of
Star Trek, Captain Picard of the USS Enterprise recounting the date of
eventual Irish reunification as having taken place in 2024 – which could
yet rate as one of TV’s more remarkable predictions!
The more
serious point being that with the ending of the transitional
arrangements, and a reversion to WTO trading conditions, we could see
the UK splintering into a rump of England and Wales, with both Scotland
and Northern Ireland peeling away to determine their own futures without
the intervention of Westminster. Is that what David Cameron had in mind
when he embarked on such a destructive course back in 2015?
And what about Federalism?
If
the scenarios outlined above are to be avoided, perhaps this could be
done by strengthening rather than undermining democracy in the UK? It is
instructive that among the former, largely white, dominions of the
British Empire, none of them adopted an unalloyed Westminster model. In
Australia, Canada, South Africa and India, all large geographical areas,
various forms of federalism were adopted, with reasonable degrees of
success. It became clear that regional interests also needed to be
represented and listened to, in a way different from the atrophied role
played by the House of Lords.
Similarly, where devolution has led
to changes in electoral rules for local parliaments, voter behaviour
changed, dramatically, to the cost of incumbent national political
parties represented in Westminster. A closer look at the system used for
the Holyrood parliamentary elections in Scotland provides with a clear
example as to the importance of the choice of electoral systems. The
Scottish system is modelled closely on the system used in Germany, where
each voter has two votes. One can be given to elect a constituency MP
according to first past the post rules. The second vote is given to a
political party, rather than an individual, and allows the overall
representation to more closely reflect the proportions of actual votes
cast. There are 73 constituency-based MSPs and 56 List MSPs, and the
system permits a wider degree of political representation than is
possible under Westminster’s first past the post rules. This has led to
a substantial reduction in the number of both Tory and Labour MSPs in
the Scottish Parliament Building at Holyrood, while currently allowing a
leading role for the SNP.
The White Cliffs of Dover
As
the clock ticks down towards the final denouement on UK EU relations,
the myopia of the Leave Government becomes more and more starkly
revealed. At the same time the constitutional weaknesses this entire
episode has revealed suggest that there is an urgent need for political
reform in the UK, irrespective of whether a Brexit agreement is achieved
or not. As the UK’s political bus comes nearer and nearer to the white
cliff-edges of Dover, let us hope that we will learn how to strengthen
and refresh our jaded political system, before it delivers terminal
damage to the UK.
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