There are some in
the FBPE community that claim that Brexit could have been stopped if
the Labour leadership had abandoned Brexit. This is either arguable if applied to 2016 or just simply wrong since 2016. But in the turmoil that is likely to follow the
vote on the Withdrawal Agreement in January, the Labour leadership
will play a crucial role. This post is about what happens if Labour
enable Brexit in any way. I am not suggesting they will (and hope
they do not), but right now this is a significant enough possibility
to be worth writing about.
The attitude of
Corbyn loyalists is that Remainers have nowhere else to go besides
Labour. If Labour enable Brexit, this will have no noticeable
impact on how Remainers vote in any General Election. They dismiss a
poll
that suggests Labour could lose a large number of votes by attacking
the poll: it was funded by the People’s Vote campaign, or who
believes polls. A more thoughtful criticism is that you are bound to
get a large number in any question that highlights Brexit, but
general elections will be fought over many issues. In short,
Remainers on the left will always vote Labour.
I would agree that
one poll tells you little about any future general election, but what
it does do is show the intensity of feeling over the Brexit issue. I
think many in the Labour leadership and Corbyn loyalists fail to
understand this. They prefer instead to misplace Remainers as the
centrist enemy, and see attacks on Corbyn over Brexit as just one
more means by which the centre and right of Labour attack Labour.
This is a serious mistake.
That Brexit is more
than just another issue or a passing fad seems clear. After the 2016
vote, around half the Remain vote was prepared to accept the result,
but the other half was not. Through two years when the two major
parties and the BBC regarded the decision as made and irreversible,
Remainers built various organisations with the aim of reversing the
vote. They held protest marches around the UK that gradually grew in
size, culminating in the biggest
march on London since the Iraq war protest. Polls now suggest the
Remain vote is more committed than the Leave vote, with a majority
over either the WA or No Deal bigger than Leave’s margin in 2016.
Where does this
passion and energy come from? It is obviously a big issue, but would
the kind of Brexit favoured by Corbyn and some Labour and Tory
MPs (close to BINO) really be such a big deal compared to staying in
the EU? On an emotional level I think there are three reasons why it
would be. First and foremost is the question of identity. Many people
in the UK regard themselves as also European, and any form of Brexit
is clearly a way of cutting the UK off from the rest of Europe.
Second, I think there is a strong feeling that leaving the EU
represents the triumph of ideological over rational argument. Once
you let a campaign of the right won by illegal means triumph, you
open the doors to more of the same. A third factor is empathy for the
position
of European migrants in the UK, who are often friends, neighbours or
colleagues.
If a skeptical
Labour leadership want to know what would happen if they enabled
Brexit, the best comparison I can suggest is how they felt after
parliament voted to put UK troops alongside US troops in the Iraq
invasion. The objection that there is no comparison because thousands
of people died because of Iraq is beside the point. I’m not saying
they are events of comparable importance, and they are completely
different in nature. These things do not work on a kind of
utilitarian rational level, but a more emotional sense of betrayal.
In the case of Brexit a betrayal of identity, of evidence based
policy making, and the wellbeing of our friends, neighbours or
colleagues.
If you put these
points to Corbyn loyalists you get a variety of responses that go
from the misguided to downright depressing. The best, but misguided,
is that a compromise is required to ‘heal the nation’. It is
misguided for reasons I set out at length here. Anything close to
BINO does not ‘take back control’, it does not give more
resources to the NHS, and it will not end Freedom of Movement. In
short, a soft Brexit fails to give Brexit voters what they voted for,
and that will be quickly pointed out to them if they do not realise
it themselves. Another response is that Labour cannot afford to lose
the votes of Labour leavers in critical seats. Quite why Labour are
more likely to lose Leave voters in these seats than Remain voters is
never specified. The worst argument I have heard is that Corbyn is
just following Labour policy agreed at conference: if you cannot see
why that is the worst argument you are probably a Corbyn loyalist.
[1] Actually that is not quite true, because the worst arguments are
Lexit arguments, but I and many others
have addressed them elsewhere. [2]
I have to be doubly
careful in posts like these because I am what one Corbyn loyalist
described as an ‘arch-Remainer’. The emotions I ascribe to many
of those who campaign for Remain are also my own. Like many of the
other economists who made up the Economic
Advisory Council I resigned because I saw the current
leadership as too content with the referendum result. As a result I
am not an impartial observer, so I need to be especially careful that
what I write about Remainers as a whole is factually based. No doubt
what I say in this post will be dismissed for exactly that reason
[3]. But what cannot be dismissed is that there have been two major
grassroots movements in the last 20 years in the UK that managed to
put more than half a million people on the streets of London, and there is a
distinct danger that Labour will be on the wrong side of both of
them.
What the precise consequences of Labour enabling Brexit would be are impossible to say. Less enthusiasm and less votes for sure, but who knows whether they would be critical when it came to the establishment of a new party or a general election. The more relevant question is why take this significant risk. I have to return to my comparison with austerity. Pre-Corbyn Labour collapsed in part because they toyed with accepting full-on austerity at just the point that austerity was becoming unpopular. Right now Corbyn Labour are toying with enabling Brexit because they worry about Leave votes that are now moving to Remain. When Brexit will not get you free from state aid, will not heal the nation, and will just lose you votes, it is time for the Labour leadership to put ideology aside and help take the issue back to the people.
What the precise consequences of Labour enabling Brexit would be are impossible to say. Less enthusiasm and less votes for sure, but who knows whether they would be critical when it came to the establishment of a new party or a general election. The more relevant question is why take this significant risk. I have to return to my comparison with austerity. Pre-Corbyn Labour collapsed in part because they toyed with accepting full-on austerity at just the point that austerity was becoming unpopular. Right now Corbyn Labour are toying with enabling Brexit because they worry about Leave votes that are now moving to Remain. When Brexit will not get you free from state aid, will not heal the nation, and will just lose you votes, it is time for the Labour leadership to put ideology aside and help take the issue back to the people.
[1] The overwhelming
majority of Labour members are Remainers, and want a People’s Vote.
What is agreed at conference is heavily influenced by the leadership.
[2] What I would add
is that Lexit contains a similar contradiction to Brexit. Just as
Brexiters cannot get a trade agreement with the EU without accepting
the backstop, so any trade deal with the EU (including being part of
the Customs Union) will require following EU rules on state aid. So
the only form of Lexit possible is No Deal, which is a hell of a
price to pay to avoid state aid rules.
[3] As someone put
it to me in a tweet, this is exactly what someone who supported Owen
Smith would say. Which is something of a tautology as the only
significant policy difference between Smith and Corbyn was Brexit.