Analysis
Yes, the mood has shifted against Brexit. But the
road back to Brussels is long and hard
Robert Ford
Three years on, the reality of the split with the EU
has changed minds. But dashed hopes could come to haunt Labour, too
Sun 5 Feb
2023 07.00 GMT
Brexit is
three years old and less popular than ever. More people are unhappy with Brexit
outcomes to date, and pessimistic about the gains to come today than at any
point in the Brexit process so far. “Rejoin” has opened up a double-digit lead
over staying out in polls asking voters how they would choose in a second
referendum on EU membership.
While
voters have swung against Brexit before, the current shift is different. Earlier
remain gains were driven by abstainers and those too young to vote in 2016
breaking against Brexit and by demographic changes which have slowly pulled the
electorate in a pro-EU direction. The vast majority of leave and remain voters
have hitherto stood by the choices they made in June 2016. That is now
changing, and it is Brexiters who are reconsidering. One in five leave voters
now say they would vote to rejoin the EU, while remain switching has stayed
much lower. The scales of opinion are being tipped against Brexit by growing
doubts among its original supporters.
One thing
driving this change of heart is the failure of Brexit reality to live up to the
hype. Leave voters’ views of the economic impacts of Brexit have shifted from
cautiously positive to strongly negative in the past year. “Things have got
worse”, and “it hasn’t turned out as expected” are among the most popular
explanations given by leave voters when asked by pollsters to explain their
shift.
Brexit is
no longer an abstract future goal, where coming benefits can be talked up,
while potential drawbacks are dismissed as partisan pessimism. Brexit is now a
lived reality, whose frictions and costs are a daily experience, and whose
promised gains have not arrived. Disappointing outcomes have made sceptics’
arguments more credible, while true believers’ promises of good times just
ahead have become harder to swallow.
The
government’s failure to deliver on leave voters’ expectations is one weight on
Brexit support. Another may be the government’s failure in general. In 2019,
Boris Johnson was able to mobilise the cause of Brexit to achieve Conservative
breakthroughs in traditionally Labour, but heavily leave-voting, seats. Now
Brexit is a settled reality, the opposite dynamic may be kicking in –
longstanding partisan antipathies are reasserting themselves, and colouring
perceptions of what Labour leavers see as a bad Tory Brexit deal.
Voters who
now see Brexit as a botched job know that it was campaigned for, pushed
through, and implemented solely by Conservative MPs. A failed Brexit deal is
becoming just another instance of Tory betrayal in communities where suspicion
of the Conservative party goes back generations. Opinium polling suggests the
shift against Brexit is markedly higher among Labour leavers than Conservative
leavers. A third of Labour Brexit supporters now want to either rejoin the EU
or negotiate a closer relationship with Brussels, compared to just a fifth of
Conservative leavers. Every impact of Brexit is rated more negatively by Labour
than Conservative Brexiters.
Partisan
differences among Brexiters can be traced back several years. Opinium polling
from June 2020 shows more than 80% of Conservative leavers opposed close
alignment with the EU, while 75% wanted to stick to the December deadline even
if it meant leaving with no trade deal. Labour Brexiters were already more
ambivalent – only half supported each of these hardline options.
That early
ambivalence has now evolved into discontent with the existing deal, and a
desire to renegotiate. More than 70% of Labour leavers asked by Opinium in
November 2022 think Brexit has gone badly so far, compared to 40% of
Conservative Brexiters. The same poll shows majority support from Labour
leavers for several closer integration options, including free movement and
even the UK accepting some EU legislation, options which remain unacceptable to
Conservative leavers.
While
dissatisfaction with the Brexit status quo may be growing, ardent remainers
should not get their hopes up. Disappointment with Brexit does not translate
into desire for another polarising referendum campaign. While a softening mood
among Labour Brexiters will make it easier for the Labour leadership to move
Britain closer to the EU without opening up divides in their support, the road
back to Brussels is long and hard. It will be difficult to achieve more than
incremental gains in the short run, making it difficult for Keir Starmer to
deliver on promises to “make Brexit work”. Dashed Brexit hopes could come to
haunt Labour in future, too.
Robert Ford
is professor of political science at Manchester University and co-author of The
British General Election of 2019

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