Brexit must be bigger than the sum of its parts. The public would have stopped supporting Brexit a long time ago if this was not the case. The fact that a decision about Brexit is still splitting the government, splitting Parliament and splitting the public indicates there is ‘something else’.
Like the dark matter not seen but holding the universe together, Brexit must contain ‘something’ which self-perpetuates its cause despite the facts showing how foolish it is.
Let’s pause about ‘no deal is better than bad deal’ and split the fervour from facts: what exactly is a deal worse than walking away from the table and cutting all the trading ties, supply chains, travel routes, free exchanges and security arrangements? Collective suicide?
Boris Johnson might still believe that Brexit will bring £350 million to the NHS, Michael Gove might still fantasise that Brexit will be cost free and Nigel Farage might still stammer about unilateral free trade but their drop in popularity shows that the public does not believe them. 53% of the public dislike Johnson, 78% dislike Gove and 83% dislike Farage.
At the same time as the perceived benefits of Brexit are disappearing into the thin air, the costs are piling in.
The Bank of England spent £70 billion on a stimulus package after Brexit vote, almost half a trillion (£490 billion) has gone missing, foreign direct investment went from £120 billion surplus to £25 billion deficit. The direct cost would pay for 56 years of EU membership.
Factor in indirect costs from the collapse of the pound, increased inflation and loss of revenue and the money being lost is huge.
Despite all this, Leavers and Remainers are as divided as ever. In June 2016, 16.1 million voted Remain, 17.4 million Leave and 16 million did not bother to vote. (The oft-quoted 52% to 48% in favour of Brexit is a misnomer: 37.4% of the electorate voted Leave, 34.7% voted Remain and 27.9% abstained. In a recent Catalonian election 48% of voters supporting independence was quoted in British newspapers as evidence that the majority did not want secession from Spain.)
The result of the ‘people’s will’ is therefore limited to 650,000 potential voters who could have swung the vote either way – hardly the ‘decisive majority’ Brexiteers quote. (1.4% of the electorate).
And the same split between Remain and Leave is still with us, 15 months after the referendum. In November 2016, 51% backed Remain. In July 2017, 54% said they would vote Remain. Give or take few percent it is still a 50-50 split, despite the barrage of arguments for and against Brexit.
Brexit is now firmly in an emotional zone. The language reflects that: traitors, saboteurs, enemies of the people but also ‘fairness’, ‘freedom’, ‘pleas’ (Theresa May’s ‘plea’ to the 27 EU leaders to offer her a Brexit she could defend at home.) Expect more of that as emotionally charged words enter the Brexit vocabulary to replace discussions about the promised economic benefits.
The fact that the argument about Brexit is now firmly in an emotional zone is politically important. No amount of bad economic data, price increases or the sheer impracticality of Brexit will persuade the Brexiteers to change their position.
In their mind, Brexit roars like a lion – it’s the EU’s fault that the roar comes out as a spluttering cough. After all, we told them exactly what they should do. It is not our fault they did not do it.
Remainers, who now have the factual arguments on their side, criticise the Brexit brigade for not saying what Brexit means. But they, themselves, are guilty of the same sin: where is their post-Brexit vision?
For emotional campaigning, facts are not enough. By all means repeat ad nauseam your message but it must not end there. It matters not only what is said, but how it is said, and who says it.
Remainers must set their stall out (East Midlands march against Brexit) and Leavers must lay out their remaining arguments for Brexit: it is not an economic gain, so is it immigration? Meddling from Brussels? What is it? To which the Remainers must either offer an alternative or accept the argument.
Broadcasters, newspapers, journalists, churches, voluntary organisations all must get involved.
Do not attack the opposition only – present your vision as well. Say what your vision is. Say it now, not in 2019 or 2021.
George Smid is chair of the European Movement East Midlands.
The Lincolnite welcomes your views. All comments are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules. Please stay on topic and be respectful of other readers.
Exciting news for MyLocal app users and The Lincolnite readers! Our latest update is now available to download from your app store and comes packed with the best local news experience you can enjoy.
Revamped News Feed: Enjoy faster loading times and smoother scrolling that make catching up on local news a breeze.
New Play Video Feed: Dive into a dynamic video feed that brings local stories to life in a whole new way.
Enhanced In-App Browser: Access external links quickly and efficiently, right from the app, without any distractions.
Update your MyLocal app from your app store (version 2.73) now and start enjoying these great new features today!
P.S.: Start your MyLocal membership today to support MyLocal and The Lincolnite deliver you a better local news experience and honest journalism from across Lincolnshire.
P.P.S.: We have some huge things in the pipeline, stay tuned!
Exciting news for MyLocal app users and The Lincolnite readers! Our latest update is now available to download from your app store and comes packed with the best local news experience you can enjoy.
Revamped News Feed: Enjoy faster loading times and smoother scrolling that make catching up on local news a breeze.
New Play Video Feed: Dive into a dynamic video feed that brings local stories to life in a whole new way.
Enhanced In-App Browser: Access external links quickly and efficiently, right from the app, without any distractions.
Update your MyLocal app from your app store (version 2.73) now and start enjoying these great new features today!
P.S.: Start your MyLocal membership today to support MyLocal and The Lincolnite deliver you a better local news experience and honest journalism from across Lincolnshire.
P.P.S.: We have some huge things in the pipeline, stay tuned!