maybe ‘train driver’ instead?
Perhaps the most infuriating questions to ask a young child is “what you do what to be, when you grow up?” Well, I found it infuriating, at least.
The question supposed that you knew what the options might – did I even know that ‘social media pundit’* was a thing back then? – and that you cared in any case: why do I need to set a goal now, when I’d rather be getting back to Top of the Pops (more innocent times, certainly)?
This might explain why my kids are currently offering ‘shark investigator’ and ‘ummm’ as their responses, when asked by others.
To generalise massively from this, forward planning is one of those things we know is probably important, but also a drag. That’s as true for politicians as it is for children (insert punchline here).
It’s even more true for organisations, because not only do you have to be bothered, but you also have to organise others to be bothered and then to do something about it. The burden-sharing that organisation brings is partly offset by the motivational aspect, especially when it’s something quite nebulous.
And Brexit is nothing if not nebulous. It requires not only an idea of what you want from a Withdrawal Agreement, but also what you want from a future relationship with the EU, and also what you want the UK to look like as a society and as a member of the international community.
‘Shark investigator’ is sounding a bit more appealing now, right?
None of this is to excuse the chronic inability of the Conservative party to settle on a course of action for Brexit, but rather to provide some context: any governing party would have faced the same difficulties and hard choices.
But as the Cabinet packs their bags for a weekend at Chequers, it’s helpful to consider how Theresa May has decided to tackle this challenge, both generally and specifically.
The first key point is that May’s general mode of making decisions is to keep things tight. As those of you who’ve read Tim Shipman’s excellent volumes All Out War and Fall Out will know, both in the Home Office and Number 10, May has tended to discuss matters with a few key advisors and then tell everyone else what’s happening. The merits and demerits are neither here nor there, but her success in her former role has evidently made it harder to adapt it to her current one.
In particular, May’s relative weight in decision-making is less now than it was pre-Premiership, especially since the 2017 General Election: the weight of the Cabinet sits relatively distinctively away from her own tendencies.
And those tendencies have been a mix of a more instinctive soft Brexit with a pragmatic desire to hold the party together, which points in a harder direction. Given where we are on policy, this suggests that party unity is the priority issue, even if opportunities to soften are pursued regularly. That the EU is also a source of softening provides a degree of cover on this.
Ultimately, that has tended to make May conflict-averse to a degree. Whereas her more general model has been to decide-and-stick, on Brexit issues she has hedged her language from her first days in office, to avoid having to collapse ambiguities and compromises that have enabled the party to stick with the programme.
All of which suggests that Chequers will not be a big break-through moment for the process.
It’s important to note here that one key strategy that May has employed in her management has been to avoid some issues (typically the more pressing ones), and focused on others. The customs arrangements is a case in point: it can only ever be a small part of a future deal, but it has occupied minds in London for many months, apparently much more than the question of the Irish dimension.
As I’ve discussed before, this is partly because customs has become a proxy for other battles about hard-/softness, but also it’s because by resolving a position on customs (which is less ‘high politics’ than borders) it is then possible to work backwards to a position on, well, borders. The fundamental interlinkage between domains in Brexit means that decisions in any one part can and will shape decisions elsewhere: that’s one reason why progress has been so hard, as those linkages become clearer and doubts are sown.
However, even if Chequers can produce a consensus around a model for customs, that will not immediately resolve the Irish dimension, which is now the very large elephant in the room: unless and until that can be addressed, there will be no customs arrangements of any kind, because there won’t be a Withdrawal Agreement or a political declaration on the future relationship.
That everyone knows this suggests one of two things.
Either London thinks that Brussels (and Dublin) is biddable on the Irish dimension, despite absolutely no objective evidence to support this: it is a hill the Commission and European Council appear fully prepared to die on.
The alternative is that there is a move to reframe the issue, in part by using the customs debate.
A recurring theme that is emerging from the debate within the Tories is that none of the exciting options can be ready for the end of 2020. That means there’s a gap between then and the implementation of whatever model it is, and no one is making a very hard bid on what that gap should look like.
Put differently, Tories seem to be arguing about the long future rather than the near one: they’ll accept some form of high alignment in return for political commitment to future jam. Given the generally low levels of trust in the political class, and the rifeness of backstabbing, this seems rather optimistic to me, but then I’m just the dad of someone who wants to be a ‘shark investigator’.
This might work, but as so often with the British debate, it’s an idea that’s driven much more by a concern about domestic politics than by an understanding of how the EU works.
If Chequers is to be a credible step forward, then it has to work not only for Tory ministers, but also the country as a whole and for the EU. Manage that and maybe we’ll all have grown up a bit.
*For any senior management reading this, this is internet slang for “high impact academic with world-leading research”. Trust me.
The post The Conservative mode of making Brexit decisions appeared first on Ideas on Europe.
The Austrian EU Presidency takes over on 1 July 2018, until the end of 2018.
On 3 July 2016, I published an article called, ‘What next?’
I wrote then:
‘Nobody knows what will happen next, not even those who so strongly campaigned for Brexit.
‘We now know they didn’t – and don’t – have a plan, except to leave the European Union, but precisely on what terms, nobody seems to have a clue.’
And the shameful thing is that we still don’t have a clue. Some two years after the referendum result, nobody knows what Brexit means.
During the referendum, nobody knew, let alone discussed:
How a borderless border on the island of Ireland could be achieved after Brexit.
How our car manufacturers, over half of whose exports go to the EU, will be able to continue to have frictionless access to the Single Market, especially as up to 90% of car parts needed to make our cars come from the rest of Europe.
What would be the status after Brexit of citizens living here from the rest of the EU, and our citizens living in the rest of the EU.
The fact that without a free trade agreement with the EU, our imported food, most of which comes from the EU, would cost more.
Which other countries the UK would be able to establish free trade agreements with, since after Brexit all our existing trade agreements with the rest of the world would have to be torn up.
None of the voters knew the answers in the referendum, and we still don’t know.
Not even our government ministers today can agree with each other how these issues (and thousands of others) will be resolved.
So, how could the voting public have known in the referendum?
The fact is that voters did not know what they were voting for in the referendum.
We still don’t know what Brexit means. When we do know, let’s vote on that (for the very first time).
In the meantime, here’s my article published on 3 July 2016 – ten days after the referendum.
WHAT NEXT? The unexpected has happened: Leave won, and now everything is uncertain.Suddenly, the country and our futures have been plunged into the dark. Nobody knows what will happen next, not even those who so strongly campaigned for Brexit.
We now know they didn’t – and don’t – have a plan, except to leave the European Union, but precisely on what terms, nobody seems to have a clue.
The government and the opposition are torn apart.
We now have no one effectively running the country. Politicians are betraying each other in a scramble to lead us, but to where we simply have no notion.
The country is also torn apart.
What else could be expected from such a wafer thin majority for the ‘Leave’ win? Scotland and Northern Ireland don’t want to leave the European Union; nor do important cities such as London, Cambridge and Norwich.
Many other towns and cities voted half in, and half out.
The referendum wasn’t even legally binding. It was meant only as advisory, with Parliament taking the final decision.
But what will be Parliament’s decision? We don’t know, except to say that given a free vote, Parliament would overwhelmingly opt for Britain to remain in the EU.
It’s only just over a week after the Brexit decision and the country is in turmoil, with uncertainty and confusion set to be on the agenda for years to come.
It will take several years to extricate the country from the EU in what looks to be a messy, uncomfortable and complicated divorce.
And it could take many more years for Britain to stabilise and find the way ahead.
Negotiating new trading agreements with over 50 countries will take considerable time; so will amending our laws of the past 40 years that are intrinsically connected to our membership of the EU.
It will be a long time before we will have any measure of whether the years of upheaval now facing the country will eventually give us any prize worth having. Many reading this may not live long enough to see the outcome.
If Parliament had meant for the Referendum result to be binding, they would surely have raised the threshold for changing the status quo.
After all, a two-thirds majority is usually required for constitutional changes in many countries across the world.
A motion in our Parliament calling for an early General Election requires a two-thirds majority to be successful – and the calculation is based on two-thirds of all MPs, whether they vote or not.
On that basis, the Referendum result fell far short.
Many of those who voted ‘Leave’ have now changed their minds; they have expressed shock and bewilderment at the crisis the Brexit vote has triggered.
Many are now angry, in the growing realisation, that the claims and promises made by the ‘Leave’ campaign were entirely untrue and completely undeliverable.
Yesterday over 50,000 people marched in London to express their protest at the Brexit decision. And over 4 million people have signed a petition requesting another referendum.
But there are also many who remain resolute that Brexit is the right route for Britain, and they relish ‘getting back their country’ and ‘taking control’.
Others of us are still mystified as to what that really means – we miss the country we now seem to have lost, and we fear for who now is going to take control.
Anything could happen next.
There could be an early General Election if Parliament so deems it. The LibDems have pledged to make staying in the EU, or re-joining, their manifesto promise. Would that make any difference?
Parliament might vote against the Referendum decision – but what would that do to peace in our country?
The Referendum result might be legally challenged.
Scotland might attempt to leave the UK so that it can re-join the EU.
There might be another referendum in a few years on whether we actually accept the EU divorce settlement or, on reflection, prefer to remain a member.
Or we might all have to buckle down and accept that we are on an unstoppable course to Brexit, regardless of the fact that around half of those who voted (maybe more now), and a majority of our Parliamentarians, don’t want that to happen.
Over the past three months at Reasons2Remain, a team of hard-working, highly-dedicated volunteers have produced a series of articles and graphics giving rational and reasoned arguments for Britain to stay in the EU. (See our illustrated portfolio.)
I’d like to warmly thank everyone for their generous support and help for this Community page, which I know from many readers comments has been highly regarded and appreciated.
There now needs to be a short period of reflection whilst we take stock and decide what next with our campaign.________________________________________________________
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The post Two years later, nobody can explain Brexit appeared first on Ideas on Europe.
will take place on Wednesday, 11 July, 9:30-12:30 and 14:30-18:30 in Brussels.
Organisations or interest groups who wish to apply for access to the European Parliament will find the relevant information below.