There is a big
debate at the moment among those who support a People’s Vote (PV)
about whether it should become before or after a General Election
(GE). Let’s assume for now there are sufficient MPs willing to vote
for the PV before a GE option, and that Johnson prefers a GE which he
thinks he can win so there would be no PV. From a Remain point of
view, should a GE or PV come first.
I last discussed
this when a Johnson deal was dead and there was talk of the
Conservatives advocating No Deal in a General Election. I made the
point, which those advocating a PV before a GE do not appear to have
considered, that if parliament passed a PV before a GE Johnson could
boycott that PV. As I was told at the time that I was not living in
the real world, let me explain why I think a Johnson boycott would
have been almost inevitable.
Consider Johnson’s
options if parliament force him to hold a PV before a GE where May’s
deal is on the ballot. If he accepts the ballot’s legitimacy, he is
in an impossible position. Does he try and campaign for a deal that
he himself voted against twice? Farage will certainly describe the
ballot as illegitimate, and that would damage Johnson's prospects in the
forthcoming GE. If he wins he gets May’s deal, probably a split in
the Conservative party and a loss at the GE. If he loses he loses
Brexit, which is his main asset in any GE
In contrast, if he
says the ballot is illegitimate he protects his Farage front, and can
continue to run an election based on parliament versus the people.
His excuse for a boycott is obvious: who wants May’s deal? With no
one recognisable prepared to argue the case for May’s deal, the
ballot begins to look like a farce. Remain might get a vote greater
than 17 million, but it is more likely the inevitability of a Remain
victory means some Remainers do not bother to vote. I’m afraid
those suggesting a boycott wouldn’t happen in those circumstances
do not know how Johnson and Cummings work.
You might think that
even with a Johnson boycott it is still worth it. If you think it
would end Brexit I have bad news. If Johnson wins a GE having
boycotted a PV he will say the PV was illegitimate and restart A50.
With a majority in parliament Brexit (either very hard or No Deal)
becomes a certainty. All the PV would have done is delay the
inevitable.
The critical
question then becomes what impact a PV might have on the GE result.
Will it reduce Johnson’s vote because some Leavers think the game
is up, or will it fire up his Leaver base who feel they have been
cheated out of the 2016 result. The latter is what the Brexit press
and most Tory and all Farage politicians will tell them. I don't know the answer on whether a PV helps or hinders a Johnson GE defeat, but it seems to me this is the crucial debate for the PV before GE question.
How does a Johnson
deal change this calculation. I think it is reasonable to assume that
a final deal will not be done with the EU before the EU summit.[1] The
reason is simple. Any deal the EU would be prepared to agree to will
leave the DUP and part of the Conservative party unhappy, and will almost
certainly mean he will not get that deal through parliament. Johnson
also knows that in all likelihood he will have to ask the EU for an
extension and that the EU will grant it. It will be better for him to
go into a GE arguing that he is on the brink of getting a deal,
rather than a deal just having broken down.
It should be now
clear that this situation makes a PV before a GE more likely to
lead to a Johnson boycott than previously. The PV cannot have his
prototype deal on the ballot as it has not been signed off by the EU. Johnson will say, with MSM credible justification, that a
PV on any other deal is ridiculous, and that he should be given a
chance to get his deal through. Because that logic will seem
plausible to most Leavers, a PV before a GE looks increasingly like a
desperate attempt to stop Johnson getting his deal. The chances of
the PV before a GE increasing Johnson’s prospect in a GE increase
significantly.
The fundamental
lesson is that a PV has to go with political change. The Tories can
boycott a referendum at any time, so a PV will only secure the end of
Brexit if that vote is taken by a parliament that will not shortly
afterwards start the process up again. That in turn means having a GE
in which the Conservatives are defeated by Labour and the Liberal
Democrats winning their marginal seats (and keeping their own). It
means tactical voting by Remainers in the next General Election. The
idea of a LibDem overall majority is a fantasy worthy of Brexiters.
Those who say a
Corbyn led government would be worse than No Deal or a very hard
Brexit are therefore working against Remain. Those who say Corbyn is
not fit to be PM are working against Remain. Those who say Corbyn
allowed Brexit to happen are working against Remain. Some of the
people saying these things may call themselves Remainers, but
tactical voting is the only realistic option for true Remainers.
To those who say to
me that they cannot vote for Corbyn because he is a Brexiter, I can
only respond in this way. Brexit is effectively impossible under a
Labour government, because the Tories and Remainers will vote against
it in parliament unless it goes to a PV, and in a PV many Leavers and
all Remainers will vote against a soft Brexit. Whatever you think
Corbyn’s beliefs are cannot change that. It is why the People’s
Vote campaign is promoting tactical voting. Anything other than a
tactical vote for Remain in the forthcoming GE is a vote for Brexit.
[1] The idea of attaching a PV to any approval of Johnson's deal when it finally comes to the Commons is very different, and not what I am talking about here.
[1] The idea of attaching a PV to any approval of Johnson's deal when it finally comes to the Commons is very different, and not what I am talking about here.
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