Here’s where my “remain” friends (and most of my friends
voted remain) and me probably part company. I suspect most of them have been
spluttering over their cornflakes and muttering darkly at TV news bulletins of
late, because of the latest shenanigans at Westminster. And I understand why.
They voted remain in the EU referendum (as did I) because they thought it was
right and sensible. Probably, like me, they did not vote remain because the EU
filled them with unalloyed joy (discussed further here). It’s a human
institution with all the faults and flaws of any human institution (and a few
extra ones to boot). But it made political sense to stay in, on the basis that
many of the problems we face don’t respect borders and are better tackled as
part of a larger political block. It made economic sense because the states of
the EU form our largest and nearest market. Indeed the single market is as much
a British construction as it is a European one. I could go on. But I won’t (at
least not about all the reasons for voting remain). Leaving, they genuinely
believed then and now, was and is madness. Leaving with “no deal” they regard
as tantamount to national self-harm on an epic scale. I’m not sure I would put
it that strongly. Time will, unfortunately, probably tell.
Their anger over Boris’ latest wheeze is genuine too. I have
no reason to believe anything else. They see him as using illegitimate (if not
strictly illegal) tactics to thwart the attempts of his Brexit opponents to
scupper a “no deal” Brexit. Some, I have no doubt, think that the proroguing of
Parliament is antidemocratic because it will deny the people’s representatives
the opportunity to scrutinise the intentions and actions of the Executive. And
with some justification they will point out that during the recent Conservative
election campaign, Boris and a number of his current cabinet colleagues, sought
to pacify moderate elements in the Conservative selectorate and garner votes by
implying that they would not do what they have essentially just done. These
various views are shared by a very large number of people. Last time I looked, well
over 1.6M had signed a petition against proroguing Parliament. Polls suggest
that there is currently a majority of that view by some margin. And there have been
protests in many UK towns and cities.
As far as the proroguing issue goes, here’s my problem with
those who have a problem. Their basic case seems to be that this is a manoeuvre
to deny Parliament the opportunity to debate the issues around leaving the EU, particularly
those raised by leaving without an agreement – the no deal scenario. But exactly
what is there to debate that hasn’t been fully aired over the last three years?
Who is there left in Parliament (or the country for that matter) that lacks the
information required to form a view? The result of the referendum itself and
how it should be responded to has been discussed to death. Early on the idea was
floated that Parliament should simply refuse to act on what technically was an
advisory vote. This was rejected. The overwhelming majority were clear that the result had to be honoured. Most MPs in 2016, and in the post 2017 House of
Commons voted remain, and a minority of them have never reconciled
themselves to the idea of leaving the EU. This I understand. But then, why did
they vote 6-to-1 to put what was a complex and nuanced decision to the people in
a binary referendum in the first place? Yes, David Cameron pushed the issue of
a referendum for relatively selfish political and party management reasons. But
he was aided and abetted by the political class as a whole, Labour, Liberal
Democrats and the Greens and others. They all abrogated their responsibilities are all guilty for the resulting chaos.The historians can argue about how the guilt should be precisely divided up when the dust has settled.
Post referendum, and post Cameron, we had a general election.
There were pro-EU membership/anti-Brexit options on the ballot paper in the
form of the Liberal Democrats, Greens and occasional others. But these were decisively
rejected. We saw the return (although perhaps temporarily) of two-party politics. Of those two main parties, both made clear
they would seek a negotiated withdrawal from the EU, so honouring the
referendum result. Labour went further. They were specific in their rejection
of no-deal, and said they would reject it as an option if they formed the
government. The election was a close run thing, but Labour didn’t form the government because the Conservatives got more votes (although a relatively small win in
terms of votes cast was then magnified by parliamentary arithmetic). But the
options were there.
It is the no deal issue that has galvanised many of my
remain friends, petition signers, press and politicians on all sides. It is presumably
no deal, so the argument goes, that won’t be scrutinised and debated if Boris
gets away with prorogation. But hang on, specifically this issue has been the
subject of debate for months. It has been voted on in the Commons.
Parliamentary skulduggery has even been resorted to by the opponents of no
deal, with active support from the Speaker of the Commons. It’s not just Boris
and his acolytes who can dive through gaps in our unwritten constitution. The
debate has produced more heat than light and precious little agreement. Some
insist that no deal will be an unmitigated disaster, others see it as the ideal
clean break with the EU. Most are probably somewhere between these extremes.
But the notion that it has not been debated, or that further debate is going to
make any difference is not sustainable.
I have no idea precisely what the effect of a no deal Brexit
will be. I am sure that there will be disruption. There will be costs. I don’t
really see where there will be benefits. Will it be a disaster on the scale of war
or famine or plague? Probably (hopefully) not. But this was always one of the
possible ways of exiting the EU. It was also always one of the potential outcomes
of the Article 50 process that Parliament voted, overwhelmingly, to trigger. In
the referendum campaign, we were warned about the potential hit to the economy and
jobs if we decided to leave. I found the warnings plausible, many did not. Some may or may not have been persuaded by the fantasy promises of the various
out campaigns. But with all of that ringing in our ears a majority of my fellow
citizens voted to leave the EU. We’ve now had three further years of debate.
There’s no evidence of mass buyer’s remorse or that another referendum would produce
a very different result, although conceivably it might produce a different
outcome. But that would hardly help settle things. If it was remain 52% vs
leave 48% (not entirely implausible if the polls are to be believed), why
should that result be allowed to stand when the first one was reversed? Parliament
ducked its obligations and handed the decision to the people. The people took
the decision. The debate has been had. The democratic thing to do is implement
the decision. It will be messy. But if democracy means anything is it surely
that we get what we (or at least the majority) vote for.
But one final note. Recently I’ve been thinking about the
life and times of a character in the Bible called Jonah. He lived in turbulent
times. His own nation had been on the up, and under the current regime things seemed to be going well. It looked like the King (Jeroboam II) was doing well,
militarily, politically and economically. I bet the King Jeroboam thought so.
But it turned out there was a whole other level of reality that the King, and
many people of the day in Israel, were missing. Their success was far more to do
with providential timing and God moving the pieces on the international chess board, than Jeroboam's genius. He was working His larger purposes out. We know this because it’s helpfully recorded
in 2 Kings 14:23-27, and explained further in the books of Jonah, Amos and
Hosea. We live in turbulent times, nationally and internationally. This is not all
and only about us, votes, debates, protest, politics and tactics. Providence
may be merciful to us, and may come through these present difficulties
unscathed. It might not. But the likes of Jonah, Amos and Hosea have a lot to
say to us today. About the humility required of leaders if nothing else. Their own people, in their own time, did not listen to them. Perhaps we are in danger of making the same mistake.
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