Starmer must tackle economic ‘disaster’ of
Brexit, warn Labour grandees
Peter Hain says Labour leader must have plans ready to
limit the damage caused by leaving the EU if he becomes PM
Lord Hain says Labour, as the prospective party of
government, has a duty to deal with the fallout from Brexit.
Toby Helm ,
Observer political editor
Sun 11 Dec
2022 06.00 GMT
Keir
Starmer must urgently develop a series of practical policies to address the
economic “disaster” of Brexit and prevent it from driving Scotland towards
independence, a former Labour Europe minister has warned.
Backed by
several other Labour peers, Peter Hain, who is also a former Northern Ireland
secretary, says the crises caused by climate change, the Ukraine war, the lack
of economic growth and rising energy prices can only be tackled through closer
cooperation with our EU neighbours than the current Brexit arrangements allow.
Writing in
today’s Observer, Lord Hain describes Brexit as a “taboo subject” because the
Conservatives “won’t admit” the huge damage it has done to the economy, and
because Labour remains “understandably reluctant to rekindle old Brexit
flames”.
But Hain
argues that – as the governor of the Bank of England, the Office for Budget
Responsibility and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
all now agree – quitting the EU is the main reason why the UK is the only G7
country with an economy still below its pre-pandemic size, and Labour, as the
prospective party of government, has a duty to prepare a detailed plan for
Brexit damage limitation.
Hain says
that, across a range of policies, Brexit has failed and the effects – often
those that are the reverse of what was promised by lead Brexiters - will only
become more evident, with potentially lethal effects on the union of England
with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
“Brexit,
supposed to control immigration, has in fact delivered both chronic labour
shortages and a dramatic jump in net migration in the year to June 2022, to a
record 504,000 – deeply ironic given the racist undertone to much of the Brexit
campaign.
“As these
Brexit failings become more evident, support for Scottish independence appears
to be edging up. Unless Labour does something about it, we could get
independence driven at least in part by Brexit, which Nicola Sturgeon
continually stresses in making her case.”
Among the
measures Hain suggests, in addition to moves to help UK companies restore
exports with the EU, is a negotiated removal of post-Brexit travel restrictions
including the 90-day limit on UK citizens visiting the EU in any 180 days. He
also proposes action to solve the crisis over the Northern Ireland protocol,
and cooperation on energy policy and climate change.
He writes:
“It’s high time we all confronted the Brexit fantasy of a ‘sovereign global Britain’.
The writing is on the wall. Our destiny lies, if not within then certainly with
Europe – and Labour needs practical policies to deliver that.”
Former
Labour home secretary David Blunkett backed Hain’s intervention and said the
economic cost of Brexit to the government was one factor preventing it from
offering more generous pay rises to public sector workers – the cause of
current strikes.
Lord
Blunkett said: “Peter Hain is quite right to highlight the tremendous economic
hit that can be identified as a direct result of Brexit. A 15% drop in trade
identified by the Office for Budget Responsibility illustrates, graphically,
the loss of resource that could be available to meet the challenge of drastic
falls in income and therefore the ability of public employers to offer more
generous wage increases and reduce the pressure cooker of industrial action.”
Former TUC
general secretary John Monks suggested Labour should back moves to solve labour
shortages in the UK. “One problem could be tackled right away: the acute
shortages of workers in some sectors, post-Brexit, especially hospitality and
agriculture. This could be done by opening the visa scheme from just skilled
workers to semi and unskilled key workers.”
Wary of
alienating Brexit voters, Starmer, a prominent remainer before he became Labour
leader, has been at pains to stress that he will not back any return to the EU
single market or customs union, let alone contemplate a return to full EU
membership, if he becomes prime minister.
Recently he
also ruled out bringing back the free movement of people between Britain and
the EU, saying it would be a “red line” for Labour if it got into power –
despite having backed the policy three years ago.
As evidence
grows of Brexit’s negative effects, many Labour remainers now believe the time
has come to support closer links with the EU.
Starmer has
also ruled out a “Swiss-style” deal with the EU, which would allow access to
the single market but require more generous immigration rules, after reports
that the government was considering such an arrangement prompted frantic
denials from No 10.

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