Shortly after the EU referendum of 2016, a “former Conservative minister” supposedly remarked that Brexit would force the Conservative Party to choose between destroying the country and destroying itself.
Both
the attribution and exact wording of this epigram may be questioned,
but precisely this choice is the dilemma with which Boris Johnson is now
wrestling. Any arrangement he may reach with the EU will inevitably
trigger another, possibly terminal bout of Conservative internal strife;
“no deal” at the end of the transition period will be a demonstrable
failure to protect the UK’s economic interests and may well provoke
irreparable fissures in its territorial integrity. The reality of Brexit
has always revolved around a series of unpalatable choices for the
British government: the last days of 2020 are faithfully following this
pattern for the Prime Minister.
Although Johnson’s dilemma arises
from specific dysfunctions within the Conservative Party, it is a
fitting end to the entire Brexit process that six weeks before the end
of the transition period so many issues relating to future UK-EU
relations remain unresolved. Ambiguity and inconsistency were deliberate
tactics pursued by the Leave campaign in 2016. The Leave campaigners
who have dominated Conservative European policy since 2016 have found it
unsurprisingly impossible to translate this equivocation into a
workable political agenda for Brexit. The abrupt shifts and reversals of
British policy during the Brexit negotiations have been the inevitable
consequence of this intellectual incoherence. An extra level of irony
has been added to this comedy of uncertainty by the overblown claims of
the Prime Minister in the General Election that Brexit would be assured
by the “oven-ready” agreement he had negotiated with the EU. This
colourful rhetoric assured for him in 2019 a large Parliamentary
majority, a majority which he initially used to pass the Withdrawal
Agreement he had indeed negotiated with the EU and then deliberately to
undermine that agreement with his Internal Market Bill.
It’s the Conservative Party, stupid
Until
now, it is obviously the internal management of the Conservative Party
rather than the national interest that has dominated British
governmental tactics in the Brexit negotiations. Theresa May was forced
by her Party to a premature notification of British withdrawal from the
EU; she was forced to adopt with minimal consultation and reflection the
economically damaging British withdrawal from both the Single Market
and Customs Union; her capacity to negotiate effectively with the EU was
sabotaged by ceaseless rebellions within her Party; and British
business finds itself woefully underprepared for the new formalities
leaving the Internal Market and Customs Union will inevitably impose
because the government cannot face the political embarrassment of
admitting unequivocally to these new constraints. Brexit will be more
economically damaging for the country than it needed to be, and that
extra damage is largely as a result of internal Party manoeuvrings.
But
it is not just in the economic sphere that the incoherence of Brexit
has been profoundly threatening. The way Brexit has been pursued has
significant constitutional implications as well. May was displaced as
Prime Minister largely because she believed that continued British
membership of the Customs Union was essential to preserving Northern
Ireland within the UK. Her successor found himself signing a Withdrawal
Agreement which will erect divisive new barriers to trade between
Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK. The SNP loses no opportunity to
remind Scottish voters that in their great majority they voted to
remain in the EU. It has watched support for Scottish independence
steadily rise since 2016 and is likely to form a new government in 2021
with a manifesto commitment (mandate) to call a second independence
referendum. In Wales, a YouGov poll
last month showed that nearly a quarter of Welsh voters would support
independence in a referendum. Conservative commentary on the differing
decisions adopted by the four UK nations during the COVID-19 pandemic
has always been derogatory and dismissive, designed to please the
Party’s overwhelmingly English membership. Few commentators are in any
doubt that a “no deal” Brexit in particular would encourage yet further
separatist enthusiasm throughout the UK.
A much-discussed opinion poll
in 2019 suggested that 63% of Conservative members thought the breakup
of the UK was an acceptable price to pay for implementing Brexit. Many
found this outcome surprising in a Party officially entitled the
“Conservative and Unionist Party.” But over the past 20 years important
shifts have taken place in the Party’s ideology and attitudes,
transforming it into something much nearer to an English nationalist
party than it has ever been in its recent history. Above all,
anti-Europeanism and its present Brexit manifestation have come to be
the glue holding an otherwise much divided Party together. Johnson is a
Prime Minister especially dependent upon his Party’s support. If he is
to retain it, he must tread with extreme care when it comes to the
nature and presentation of any final arrangement with the EU.
Johnson should watch his back
It
is sometimes assumed that because the Prime Minister has a substantial
Parliamentary majority he will be able inevitably to cajole, bully and
persuade his Party into eventually accepting whatever treaty he finally
presents to Parliament before year-end. This is at best an
oversimplification. He might emerge victorious from such a contest,
particularly if Labour abstains or votes to endorse the negotiated
document. But the outcome could never be predicted with certainty
beforehand and any plausible agreement will inevitably provoke vigorous
dissatisfaction among the most radical Eurosceptic Conservative MPs.
Under May, these MPs showed themselves to be ruthless, well-organised
and energetic. Johnson must fear that this weaponry will be directed
against him if he is seen to make unacceptable concessions to the EU in
order to achieve agreement. His present political authority is much less
dominating than it was a year ago. He may well conclude that a fight
with his backbenchers, with the overwhelmingly Eurosceptic membership of
his Party and the Eurosceptic press is a battle that he cannot be sure
of winning – and even if he does, at an unacceptable cost to his
Premiership.
One further consideration may weigh with the Prime
Minister. Given the poor preparation for the new Brexit formalities at
the beginning of 2021, it now seems unavoidable that in the first half
of next year there will be considerable and photogenic disruption in and
around the ports linked closely to continental Europe. If Johnson has
signed an agreement which can be seen to have facilitated this
confusion, he will find it hard to escape widespread criticism for his
role in the ensuing chaos. Nor will the benefits of any “deal” signed
remotely approximate to the supposed benefits of Brexit promised by the
Leave campaign in 2016. There would be attractions for the Prime
Minister to embrace a “no deal” Brexit which would allow him to blame
the EU, at least initially, for the disruption and the government’s poor
preparation. This government’s approach to CV-19 has revolved round
political positioning and the avoidance of blame. It would not be
surprising if it behaved similarly in the concluding moments of the
post-Brexit negotiations. CV-19 and the EU would be an attractive pair
of villains in governmental self-exculpation next year.
Hanging by a thread
There
are credible reports that the latest national lockdown was provoked by
the leak of the contents of a private discussion between the Prime
Minister and his closest colleagues. This outcome was not necessarily
the one desired by the leaker. It is entirely possible that some
similar random event over the coming days or weeks will tip the scales
between a “deal” and “no deal.” As he himself might put it, the Prime
Minister finds himself between Scylla and Charybdis. There is rich irony
in the fact that the original purveyor of having your cake and eating
it should now find himself confronted with the opposite set of
circumstances. Far from possessing an embarrassment of choice, he is now
reduced to two bleakly unattractive options, between which he seems to
oscillate. Not the least likely outcome is that the year will end with
“no deal” because Johnson is unable to make up his mind. The Brexit
process, begun with a bang by Johnson in 2016, may well end with a
whimper on 31
st December, 2020
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