Many people, and
perhaps particularly economists, will have been told at some point
that whatever policy idea they are trying to put forward may make perfect
sense but doing it is ‘politically impossible’. Sometimes this
has some real meaning which the proposer needs to address, but
sometimes the statement can stand for little more than village
gossip, or the wisdom of crowds, where the village or crowd is
Westminster, Washington or wherever.
Take, for example,
simplifying the tax system. Any simplification generally creates
winners and losers, and politicians are often reluctant to embark on
such schemes because the losers always seem to matter more than the
winners. In this case being politically impossible means something
concrete.
But not always. As
my first Brexit example take starting the Article 50 process. It
seemed to me at the time that anyone with any expertise on the issue,
or who had given it some thought, had concluded that starting A50 when
the UK did was a terrible idea if you wanted to make a success of
Brexit. It was, to be honest, blindingly obvious. As we are now all
too well aware, the A50 process ends in the UK leaving in March 2019
whether a deal has been done and approved or not, unless the EU
decides otherwise. It is a negotiation with a gun at the head of
whichever country is leaving, and it was designed to be exactly that
way.
Some argue that the
UK had no choice because the EU refused to negotiate outside the A50
framework, and indeed were encouraging the UK to start as soon as
possible. But given that the whole process was designed to put the
screws on the leaving country they would of course say that. Even if they
had given no hint at what was possible and what was not before that
process began, the UK could have at least got their own act together
before starting the process. As we now know, most of the two years
was wasted because of internal negotiations within the Conservative
party.
But at the time we
did start A50, the consensus at Westminster was that it was
politically impossible not to start. I think this is an example where
politically impossible just meant the wisdom of the Westminster
village. Brexiters and their press backers pushed for it because they
couldn’t quite believe their luck at winning the referendum and
feared popular support would quickly vanish, but that was never a
rational reason for the majority who were not Brexiters to follow
their twisted logic.
The responsibility
for this failure in doing what was obviously the wrong thing to do
must lie primarily with the Prime Minister. If she or her advisers
had understood what a disaster an unplanned A50 process would be, she
could have easily resisted her Brexiter MPs and press by going over
their top to explain the dangers of an unprepared A50 process to the
people. But instead her advisers probably told her it was politically
impossible to delay. Once she had decided this it was difficult for the
opposition to oppose, because to be frank they do not get the
exposure and perhaps also it would have been personally embarrassing
to Corbyn given his immediate reaction to the result.
I wonder whether we
are seeing the same problem with planning after May’s deal is voted
down. Sure the Brexiters want us to crash out with no deal, but the
overwhelming majority of MPs do not. Yet many MPs seem to think that
having come this far it is politically impossible not to end up with
a deal of some sort. If not May’s deal, then some other deal. But
this is nothing more than the wisdom of the Westminster crowd. The
reality is that any deal is going to look terrible. You could reduce
the economic damage with something closer to BINO, but that just
makes the loss of a UK say in the rules it has to obey that more
obvious.
There may be a
similar problem with those calling for a second referendum, suggests
Steve Richards here.
It is deemed politically impossible for MPs themselves to revoke
Article 50, because faith in democracy will be destroyed. Richards
suggests a betrayal narrative will develop whatever parliament does:
it is already there every time a second referendum is incredibly
described as overruling the wishes of the people. If No Deal is not
on the ballot (can we seriously risk the possibility of the Brexiters doing yet more damage through a No Deal win?) those who incredibly favour No Deal will say they have
been disenfranchised.
Whether its through a second referendum or directly revoking A50, it is time MPs
started doing what is best for the country. We have had two years of
chaos, economic damage and neglect of other issues because MPs have
slavishly followed the result of a referendum illegally and narrowly won. That referendum result was based on a view of what is possible that events have shown is simply false. It is time for MPs to start winning back the trust of those who think
the EU, or EU immigration, is at the heart of their problems by being
honest, and enacting policies that actually addressed the problems of
those who have been left behind. It is only this that will stem a revival of UKIP or worse: the EU referendum process is a lesson in why pandering to the false tales of the far right is a road to ruin.