Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2024 8:51 pm
My view is that it's about as low intensity as they can get away with. It's not "seize the benefits of Brexit" or whatever. It's closer to "make the best of Brexit".
But you're dead right, there is a significant constituency who really hate it. I think it would be better to put it in terms of "resetting our relations with the EU".
As luck would have it, O'Brien was talking about this earlier today. The conundrum goes like this :
- the polls show that hardly anybody thinks that Brexit was a great idea any more
- if there was a re-run of the 2016 referendum tomorrow, there would be a clear majority to remain (re-join).
- to possibly a lesser extent, people are aware, or are becoming aware, of the actual damage that Brexit has done to the UK's economy and society.
It is therefore a massive mistake, or category error, for Starmer to say that he wants to "make Brexit work". It cannot "work", and never could. Saying so also, as I alluded to previously, puts people's backs up in an instant.
So, why is Starmer not telling the truth - that Brexit was a dreadful idea, that it has caused considerable damage to the UK's economy and society, and that his job as PM - the best he can hope to achieve - is to minimise or mitigate that damage (aka "re-set" the UK's relationship with the EU), not "make it work"? After all, the fabled priceless ming vase has now been safely carried along the full length of the highly polished floor, and is safely installed in a secure cabinet in Downing Street.
The only conclusion I can tentatively draw is that Starmer still has an eye on the (fragile) coalition of voters that carried him to victory in July - in particular those Leave voters in the "Red Wall" seats who voted Labour this time. Arguably, that cohort of voters - those who still cling to "sovereignty" - is diminishing, and will continue to do so, but Starmer still needs to mind his Ps and Qs with respect to them, as his ten year project very much depends on winning re-election in 2029. Until he is happy that this particular cohort of voters has diminished to a point where it can safely be either ignored or told the unvarnished truth, he is going to continue to tread this incredibly frustrating line.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.