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Even Farage says Brexit has failed. Why won’t
Starmer?
William
Keegan
As every sector counts the mounting cost of our
catastrophic break with Europe, Labour must find its nerve
Sun 28 May
2023 07.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/may/28/even-farage-says-brexit-has-failed-why-wont-starmer
What do my
friends the musicians Sting, John Etheridge and Tom McGuinness (of the
Manfreds) have in common, apart from music? They have recently told me they are
witnessing first-hand the frustrations of Brexit: loss of the benefits of
freedom of movement, and the bureaucratic damage inflicted on one of this
country’s widely recognised strengths, namely the creative arts.
In this
they are joined by most British manufacturers and members of the hospitality
industry. These are struggling to find replacements for the EU workers who have
been made to feel unwelcome and have been effectively banned, or voted with
their feet. All their would-be employers think Brexit is hugely damaging to
their respective businesses, and would like to reverse it.
Moreover,
they cannot understand why the Labour party is being so wet on the issue. One
hears the view that Keir Starmer is playing a cautious and clever game. But one
also hears the view that, for all the efforts of Starmer and shadow chancellor
Rachel Reeves to convince the public that Labour has a vision, this vision is
coming across as being somewhat blurred, and mistily confusing.
At a time
when opinion polls show that clear majorities of respondents think Brexit was a
mistake, and one of the prime culprits, the egregious Nigel Farage, admits that
“Brexit has failed”, Labour seems terrified of seizing the opportunity of a
political lifetime, and simply going for rejoining.
Before we
continue, it should be noted that, inevitably, Farage blames everyone but
himself for the disaster of Brexit, and shows no signs, as yet, of fulfilling
his promise to “live abroad” if Brexit proved to be the disaster it indubitably
is.
The
ultimate irony, as the former EU commissioner for competition Mario Monti
reminded us in the Financial Times, is that “the benefits of such a successful
project [the single market], whose parents were two British politicians (prime
minister Margaret Thatcher and commissioner Arthur Cockfield) would eventually
be given up by the UK as part of Brexit”.
People can
no longer blame the EU for their troubles. Years of austerity and neglect are
catching up with us
I cannot
refrain from reminding people of our Brexiter prime minister Rishi Sunak’s
Freudian slip in pointing out to the awkward squad in the Northern Irish
Democratic Unionist party that by being in the UK and the single market they
had the best of both worlds.
It is a
common refrain that “things are going to pot” and “nothing seems to be working
properly” – an exaggeration, perhaps, but an understandable one. But one thing
is abundantly clear: people can no longer blame the EU for their troubles.
Years of austerity and neglect are catching up with us.
Which
brings us back to Labour. I commend the view of Trevor Greetham of Royal
London: “While there wasn’t a ‘Brexit dividend’ there would certainly be a
‘reversing Brexit’ dividend. Any party coming in to office with a credible
promise to join the single market, or ultimately the EU, would be able to base
their tax and spending plans on a significantly larger economy with OBR
approval” – a reference to the Office for Budget Responsibility’s widely
accepted calculation that the macroeconomic cost of Brexit rises to about 4% or
£100bn a year.
The
alternative, says Greetham, is the “austerity mark two” already pencilled in
for this government’s plans for public spending should it win the next
election.
Now, the
damage being caused by Brexit is mounting visibly by the day. My two objections
to those politicians and columnists who say it will be years before we can
rejoin are, first, the damage is guaranteed to intensify when the next stage of
the barriers to trade comes into force at the end of this year, and, second,
there are still ultra-rightwing Brexiters who are trying to enforce the
abandonment of thousands of EU laws, which would make it that much more
difficult to negotiate re-entry. So far even Brexiter Sunak has warded them off
on most issues, but those ERG fanatics are still hard at it.
After the
searing experience with the 2016 referendum, people worry about the ghosts that
might reappear if there is another. But why bother? Edward Heath seems to be
remembered principally for the three-day week of 1973-74 and being brought down
by the miners. But he also goes down in history for exercising the leadership
to take us into what was then the European Economic Community in 1973 – it was
Harold Wilson who held a referendum in 1975 to reconcile the dissidents in the
Labour party. Mrs Thatcher did not feel the need to hold a referendum in 1986
when we joined the single market.
In my view,
Starmer should come out strongly, and soon, for re-entry. He should make it an
election issue, while hammering home the mounting costs of a Brexit championed
by a failing and totally discredited Conservative-Brexit party.

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