OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
The Fantasy of Brexit Britain Is Over
Aug. 1,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/01/opinion/britain-brexit-truss-sunak.html
Credit...Andrew
Testa for The New York Times
By Richard
Seymour
Mr. Seymour
writes about Britain’s politics and culture.
LONDON —
The Boris Johnson era is over. But the turmoil has only just begun.
For the
third time in under a decade, a crisis at the top of the Conservative Party has
ousted a sitting prime minister. Whereas his predecessors had been brought down
by Brexit, Mr. Johnson’s reign was broken by a series of crises. Some, such as
chronic labor shortages and a surging cost of living, were material. Others,
notably Mr. Johnson’s rule breaking through the pandemic, were ethical. By the
end, the problem was fundamentally electoral: A string of defeats and miserable
polling convinced Conservative lawmakers that Mr. Johnson’s electoral pulling
power was at an end.
Yet the two
candidates vying to replace him are unlikely to offer anything better. Both
served in Mr. Johnson’s cabinet — Rishi Sunak as chancellor of the Exchequer
and Liz Truss as foreign secretary — and are implicated, directly or by
association, in the scandals that felled him. More pressingly, neither displays
any idea of how to cope with Britain’s structural problems, offering either a
cut in taxes or in spending. For the country, both options are bad. The chaos
of recent months isn’t going anywhere.
But Mr.
Johnson’s resignation also brings something to a close. For nearly two years
after his election in December 2019, the country enjoyed an interlude of
relative social peace and political stability. Buoyed by its delivery of Brexit
and a successful Covid-19 vaccination rollout, the government enjoyed a
substantial lead over a weak and demoralized Labour opposition. What’s more,
the country — in the strange, suspended time-space of the pandemic — appeared
to coalesce. In this brief interregnum, it appeared that Britain, nourished by
nationalism and an interventionist state, was undergoing a revival.
No longer.
Economically stagnant, socially fragmented and politically adrift, the country
is being cut down to size. The right’s Brexit fantasy — of a revitalized
Britain, freed from the shackles of Europe and able once again to confidently
assert itself at home and abroad — is finished.
Though now
giving way to a familiar nightmare, that fantasy seemed for a while to envelop
the country. The strange cultural and emotional feel of high Johnsonism is
captured by two of the most watched broadcasts in British history, both of
which took place during his tenure. The first was Mr. Johnson’s address to the
nation on March 23, 2020, declaring a national lockdown. The second was the
Euro 2020 final, in which England stood a realistic chance of winning against
Italy, on July 11, 2021. Both broadcasts, watched by tens of millions of
people, briefly synthesized a moment of national unity. Both portended the
suspension of normality in the name of a national struggle, vaguely linked to
folk memories of World War II.
The eerie
quiet of lockdown — with its empty streets, visitations from wildlife and
ritual clapping for essential workers — was matched by the flag-bedraggled,
drunk and delirious mania of crowds roaming empty commercial streets and
fervently chanting, “It’s coming home!” These were distinctly nationalist
moments, but they were not identical. One nationalism was top down, the other
grass roots. One was “British,” establishment nationalism, the other “English,”
with more proletarian accents. Yet together they briefly manufactured a sense
of nationhood.
It was, of
course, hardly a time of national idyll. Tens of thousands of older Britons
needlessly died in overrun hospitals because of delays in declaring lockdowns.
Food bank use rose to an all-time high, with over 2.5 million people receiving
packages. By the end of 2020, nine in 10 low-income families had experienced a
serious deterioration in their income, and the proportion of people reporting
clinically significant depression and anxiety tripled, rising from 17 percent
to 52 percent. Even so, the precarious project of national unity, supported by
enormous public spending to manage the pandemic, briefly worked: The Tories led
in the polls, impervious to scandal and discontent.
In
September last year, things started to shake loose. Fuel shortages, created by
a dearth of truck drivers, began to corrode Mr. Johnson’s support. In December,
the first accounts of illegal partying in 10 Downing Street, the prime
minister’s official residence, emerged. By February, rising energy prices were
squeezing living standards, and food banks were overwhelmed by soaring demand.
Hospitals — overstretched and underfunded — struggled with a backlog of around
six million patients, and understaffed airports canceled flights. At
Westminster, the crisis enveloping the country was transmuted into a growing
clamor to remove Mr. Johnson. He clung on for a while, but by midsummer, it was
over.
The economy
is now heading toward an abysmal period. High energy prices, runaway inflation,
struggling exports and rising interest rates are, in the words of the economist
Duncan Weldon, a “perfect storm.” In response, Ms. Truss, by far the favorite
to win the contest to replace Mr. Johnson, has promised to cut taxes — to be
paid for by deferring debt repayments rather than cutting spending. Mr. Sunak,
by contrast, would continue in the short term with his current policy of
raising taxes while signaling that spending cuts are coming down the line.
Neither approach, from the Tory right or the Treasury, would address the
underlying causes of the cost-of-living crisis. Lacking ideas, the
Conservatives are reverting to type.
That may be
fatally complacent. Oppositional currents, contained for a spell by Johnsonism,
are gradually resurfacing. Scotland is once again promising to stage an
independence referendum, putatively for as soon as next October. In Northern
Ireland, the republican Sinn Fein has become the biggest party, weakening the
Unionist establishment. And in England, a wave of symbolically significant
strikes — at railways, call centers and airports — has broken out, offering
hope for workers who’ve seen their living standards fall for over a decade.
Government approval is at its lowest in three years, and neither potential
leader enthuses the public. Tory Britain is unraveling.
But what
even is Britain? The historian David Edgerton argues that the British nation
existed only for a few decades after World War II. Until then, British identity
was global, pinned to its empire. It became a nation only in the postwar years,
when capitalism was organized by the state and citizens were offered “cradle to
grave” welfare. Since then, as national industries were sold off and the City
of London took center stage, Britain has become merely a hub for multinational
corporations, denuded of any wider social or civic resonance. It was the
dormant British nation of the postwar era — or at least the nostalgic memory
of it — that Brexit was supposed to revive.
The exit of
Mr. Johnson, Brexit’s most charmed cheerleader, marks the demise of that
fantasy. In its place, unmistakable and unstinting, comes crisis.
Richard
Seymour (@leninology) is an editor at Salvage magazine and the author of
several books about politics and culture, including, most recently, “The Disenchanted
Earth: Reflections on Ecosocialism and Barbarism.”
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