Brexit is the monster under the bed Liz Truss is
desperately trying to ignore
Rafael Behr
The likely winner of the leadership contest insists
Brexit was the right path to take with the vehemence of a zealous convert
‘Liz Truss claims that backing the wrong horse in the
Brexit referendum taught her to discard orthodox economic thinking.’
Wed 31 Aug
2022 06.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/aug/31/brexit-monster-under-bed-liz-truss-ignore
There is a
book that foresaw with precision this summer’s Conservative leadership contest,
although it was first published in 1980. It is a thin volume about denial and
negligence, making its point with few words and colourful illustrations. It is
called Not now, Bernard by David McKee.
The titular
hero is a boy who tries to alert his parents to the presence of a child-eating
monster in the garden. They are busy with other things. “Not now, Bernard,”
says the father, striking his own hand with a hammer. “Not now, Bernard,” says
the mother, watering a plant.
The monster
eats the boy.
The next
resident of 10 Downing Street will find the garden crawling with monstrous
economic and political menaces. A chorus of Bernards is raising the alarm.
Economists, MPs, former Tory ministers, charities, trade unions, businesses,
local councils – all can hear rustling in the bushes where a beastly crisis
lurks, ready to savage the new prime minister.
Anyone who
pays an energy bill and does a weekly shop can feel the claws of a budget
squeeze closing around the nation’s windpipe. There’s an ogre in the health
service. “Not now, Bernard,” says Rishi Sunak. There’s a fiend in the financial
outlook. “Not now, Bernard,” says Liz Truss. There are devils in your policy
details. “Not now, Bernard!”
Then there
is that other monster, the one that has become such a fixture in the garden
that even the opposition seems not to notice it any more. Can we talk about
Brexit? Not now, Bernard!
Britain’s
self-exclusion from continental markets is not the biggest cause of present
economic pain but it will be hard to imagine remedies in the absence of any
rational audit of that decision or any reexamination of the ideological
fixations that provoked it. But for Brexit believers, it is always too soon and
too late to pass judgment.
Too soon,
because the benefits of freedom lie unclaimed under the pyre of “retained” EU
regulations that both Truss and Sunak promise to incinerate. And too late,
because Brexit is the settled will of the people and any hint of a downside is
sedition.
The Tory
party recognises only two possible positions on Britain’s relationship with the
EU – heroic insistence on further severance and cowardly plotting to rejoin.
Labour, unwilling to adopt the former stance and afraid of being cast in the
latter one, says nothing meaningful on the subject.
Meanwhile,
the erection of pointless customs barriers between Britain and its nearest
markets has obstructed trade, imposed costs on business, snarled up supply
chains and stoked inflation. The end of free movement has caused labour
shortages for food producers, care homes and a gamut of services in between.
Free trade
deals with non-European states that were meant to compensate for the loss of
continental custom have had negligible impact. (Most are copy-and-paste jobs
from arrangements Britain had as an EU member.)
Sterling
has depreciated, but without the compensating boost to export competitiveness
that might be expected from a currency devaluation. Business investment has
been flat since the referendum, in large part because the political climate has
been so unpredictable. That volatility – two general elections and three
changes of prime minister in six years – is a function of the struggle to turn
an ideal Brexit, nurtured in the parochial Eurosceptic imagination, into a
reality-based Brexit involving other countries and real people’s jobs.
It can’t be
done. Opinion polls suggest a majority of voters think the whole thing was a
mistake. Liz Truss, the likely winner of the leadership contest, insists
otherwise with the vehemence of a zealous convert.
Truss was a
remainer in 2016 because she was an acolyte of George Osborne. The then
chancellor convinced his disciple that Britain would not be foolish enough to
jettison EU membership. The campaign would be fought on the economy and the
smart thing for an ambitious young minister to do was back the winning side.
She promptly did just that once the results were in.
Truss now
claims that backing the wrong horse in the referendum taught her to discard orthodox
economic thinking. That created a mental vacancy, which she filled with
hardline Brexit dogmas. By 2019, she was arguing in private that Britain could
safely walk away from the EU without a comprehensive deal. Brussels, she said,
would immediately be cowed into “side deals” to mitigate any possible harm, the
threat of which was, in any case, vastly exaggerated by lily-livered remoaners.
Having
learned to despise received Treasury wisdom, Truss has graduated on to scorn
for diplomacy as traditionally practised at the Foreign Office. Reports of her
encounters with overseas counterparts suggest she stumbles at the subtle
boundary between direct and brusque; candid and crass.
That
tendency was on display at the hustings event last week, where Truss was asked
whether the French president, Emmanuel Macron, is friend or foe. “The jury’s
out,” she said. It was meant in a mischievous spirit, with an eye only for the
Tory activists in the room. Foreign secretaries and wannabe prime ministers
used to avoid imbecilities of that kind before Boris Johnson contaminated both
offices with his marauding insouciance. And even he doesn’t hesitate to call
France an ally.
Tories now
speak increasingly fondly of the outgoing prime minister, not because they
remember him as a skilled leader, but because his unique skill is mesmerising
them into forgetting what good government is meant to look like. Truss doesn’t
have that magic touch. The Brexit booster wand sits awkwardly in her hand.
Conservative
readiness to indulge Johnson is no measure of his reputation in the country,
but the leadership contest is not a national election. For at least one more
week, British politics is contained in that sealed chamber where there is a
Boris legacy to celebrate, where the solution to poverty is corporate tax cuts,
where the solution to everything is tax cuts, where tax cuts have no impact on
public service budgets, where life outside the EU is all upside and can only
get better.
But there’s
a monster in the garden.
McKee’s
story doesn’t end when Bernard is eaten. In a brilliant twist, the monster then
enters the house and moves into the boy’s room, breaking his toys and eating
his dinner. Still the parents don’t notice. “But I’m a monster,” the monster is
finally moved to inform them. “Not now, Bernard,” they say.
This is the
next chapter for Britain. The monster is here, announcing itself with roars and
snarls. The crisis is upon us, demanding capable, serious government. When will
that cry be heard? Not now, Britain. Not now.
Rafael Behr
is a Guardian columnist
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