It’s the
silver lining from this terrible age of Donald Trump: he is pushing Britain
closer to the EU
Gaby
Hinsliff
Ten years
after the Brexit vote, Trump’s disdain and insults are fuelling the belief that
the UK should renew ties with Europe
Fri 3 Apr
2026 16.49 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/apr/03/donald-trump-silver-lining-uk-eu-closer
No, me
neither, judging by the warning from the Ryanair boss, Michael O’Leary, that a
global shortage of jet fuel caused by the Iran war may soon lead to cancelled
flights. Suddenly a week in Cornwall looks a safer bet, though even that will
be a stretch for some families as the cost of long car journeys heads through
the roof. When the representatives of more than 40 countries held talks in
London earlier this week to discuss unblocking the strait of Hormuz, they
convened virtually, not in person. This is no time to be seen boarding a
private jet.
As Donald
Trump prepares to walk away from the hornets’ nest he so recklessly poked, the
rest of the world is now bracing to inevitably get stung. Keir Starmer opened
an unusually downbeat local election campaign this week by warning that the
coming months won’t be easy, which would be an almost comical understatement
except there’s nothing remotely funny about the prospect of American hubris in
the Gulf triggering a global economic crisis. Yet the one shaft of sunlight in
the gloom was Starmer’s argument – echoing that made recently by Rachel Reeves
– that volatile times mean a closer partnership with Europe is firmly in
Britain’s national interest. Real patriotism, in other words, isn’t about
stringing union jacks from lamp-posts, but defending your country from the
mounting threats it faces, in a world grown too dangerous to indulge the
isolationists’ fantasies any longer.
It’s 10
years this June since Britain voted to leave the EU, though it feels longer: 10
years since Brexit was Brexit and we were going to make a success of it, a line
that now makes its architects visibly squirm. (When was the last time you heard
Nigel Farage mention Brexit?) It’s remainers, sensing the tide turning finally
in their favour, who want to make a big deal of an anniversary that leavers
would seemingly rather forget.
If there
were a referendum tomorrow, 63% of Britons would vote to rejoin the EU,
according to recent YouGov polling. Since rejoin would probably win an even
bigger landslide in many of the urban seats up for election in May, a cynic
might say Starmer had his reasons for suddenly warming to Brussels and cooling
on Washington. But at Easter, let’s not be churlish about this minor miracle,
not least as it’s not confined to Britain.
Like a
tyrannical father who can’t understand why his adult children are no longer
talking to him, Donald Trump seemingly blames everyone but himself for the US’s
growing isolation in this war. But he is the one who pushed his country’s
closest friends away, despite their best efforts to stay close. The playground
insults openly flying across the Atlantic, with Trump taunting Emmanuel Macron
over his marriage and mocking Starmer’s refusal to send Britain’s supposedly
“old, broken down aircraft carriers” to the Gulf, are a symptom, not a cause,
of a broken relationship. What kind of ally publicly rubbishes their defence
partner’s kit, advertising weakness to their enemies? The kind, of course, who
attempted to annex Greenland in January and now threatens to walk away from
Nato altogether. Though Britain still hasn’t given up entirely on the
relationship, with the king facing an increasingly awkward-looking state visit
to Washington this month, you can’t keep building bridges for ever to someone
who keeps setting fire to them. Even Italy’s Giorgia Meloni, once seen as the
closest European leader to Trump, declined US requests this week to use a
Sicilian airbase.
The
Greenland crisis taught European leaders that not only is the US unlikely to
save them in a crisis, but increasingly it may be the crisis, encouraging them
to huddle closer to each other for protection and blurring the lines between EU
and non-EU members with a shared interest in defence. Now the threat of a
destabilising recession made in Washington is only likely to encourage further
circling of the wagons.
Back in
Britain, all this comes just as Downing Street is finally beginning to realise
that it can never be tough enough on immigration to please Reform UK voters,
and that all it’s achieved by trying is to boost the Greens. Though the idea of
winning people back instead by tackling the cost of living looks almost
impossible in the short term, in the long term Labour’s best hope is almost
certainly unwinding a hard Brexit thought to have knocked up to 8% off GDP and
a whopping 18% off investment. The one good thing about having voted to
repeatedly bang your head against a brick wall, it turns out, is that it’s
within your power to stop.
Starmer’s
close ally Nick Thomas-Symonds has accordingly spent months negotiating a deal
that skirts tactfully around Labour’s manifesto commitment not to bring back
freedom of movement, the last real remaining live rail of Brexit politics. But
the idea of a youth mobility scheme giving the under-25s a taste of work and
study abroad is now popular even with leave voters, while this week’s news that
closer alignment with EU rules on food and drink might mean the relabelling of
marmalade – the kind of thing that once reliably enraged Brexiters – barely
elicits a shrug any more. Who cares about jam, after all we’ve been through?
Little by little, month by month, Britain and Europe are sidling closer.
It isn’t
all going to be plain sailing. Though partners in defence, we are still
sometimes rivals in trade, each seeking a competitive edge. If the Gulf remains
blocked then countries around the world may soon be competing for frighteningly
scarce resources, from oil to medicines, and anyone who watched shoppers
fighting over loo roll on the eve of lockdown knows that rarely brings out the
best in anyone. But as every family finds out, a crisis can either bring you
closer together or push you further apart, and so far Europe seems to be
choosing unity.
Sadly,
Britain isn’t going to rejoin the EU tomorrow: the union as we left it no
longer even exists, having moved on without us. But the idea of building
something new, at speed, no longer seems unrealistic. The will is there, if not
yet the way; what’s needed is a little political courage. Like a cheating
partner who regrets the affair the minute they’re caught, Britain has learned
the hard way that we were fools to take this relationship for granted. If the
stars have aligned to give us a second chance, we can’t afford to throw it
away.
Gaby
Hinsliff is a Guardian columnist

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