In the 1990s, a populist, nationalistic, and anti-globalist attitude began to emerge in the United Kingdom. It slowly attracted support and eventually influenced political positions, including the Conservative Party’s right wing. The underlying grievances in the U.K. were the European Union’s harm to Britain’s economy and removal of London’s immigration control.
In the early 2000s, a British politician named Nigel Farage, a member of the European Parliament but otherwise little known, starkly personified the rising British First politics, anticipating President Trump’s campaign. Farage translated those percolating emotions into a powerful message leading eventually to the founding of the U.K. Independence Party and later the Brexit Party. Farage, on and off, led both.
About ten years later, establishment politicians noticed Farage and the intensifying Brexit demands, and adopted a strategy meant to weaken the anti-EU momentum and neutralize Farage, namely, to persuade the EU to amend some of its regulations to make them more favorable to London.
Unfortunately for establishment Conservative Party anti-Brexit members and David Cameron, Prime Minister, British overtures to the EU in Brussels were not well received. The EU held that if concessions were granted to the U.K., other members would demand them as well. Discussions with the EU staggered on and led to louder referendum demands. Boris Johnson, former Mayor of London and a leading Conservative Member of Parliament, became the principal champion of Brexit. Cameron finally scheduled a non-binding referendum on Britain’s membership for June 23, 2016.
The ensuing tough fought campaign between the Brexit and Remain camps included exaggerated claims about how much money the U.K. would save just on health care, and assertions about how once released from EU constraints, Britain’s entrepreneurial spirit would rise to new heights. Moreover, it was assumed that a new bilateral U.S. trade agreement would replace the EU as a trading partner.
Objections soon arose in Scotland because the Scots benefitted substantially from the EU. As well, Northern Ireland opposed losing the open EU border with the Republic; the threat of U.K. fragmentation remains serious.
In the referendum, Brexit supporters won the non-binding vote by a 1.8 percent margin. Cameron resigned as Conservative Party head, and Theresa May replaced him as leader and PM. May accepted the referendum as the will of the British people and began negotiating a structured, rather than hard, U.K. departure.
London notified Brussels that the country would withdraw. However, the EU was not going to allow Britain to leave gently and still retain some EU privileges.
May and her negotiators worked through several extensions to conclude an agreement. Parliament rejected it three times. Johnson, ambitious to replace May, led the successful resistance, arguing to a weary nation that Brexit needed to be done. After the last defeat in June 2019, May resigned as party leader and was replaced by Johnson. He called a general election for December and won by a large majority.
Parliament agreed that Johnson would inform the EU that the U.K. would withdraw on January 31, 2020. The British Government now has until the end of December to negotiate trade with the EU, joint defense equipment development, and security co-operation.
Brexit rode an international wave of emotion made up of a public sense that regular citizens were losing control over their lives and national outcomes. For the average Briton, the EU was a distant, murky authority run mostly by foreigners who seemingly regulated too many aspects of their lives. Discomfort with the British political establishment that had relinquished sovereignty to faceless Brussels bureaucrats was also part of these feelings. They were successfully captured by politically ambitious leaders who translated them into a movement.
Britain’s EU exit difficulties have really just begun. The future will reveal the British economy’s reaction to the loss of its largest export market and its access to EU capital investment. Moreover, the U.K. was an important player in the EU’s planning and decision-making processes, and in the EU’s operation.
And finally, the trade agreement with the U.S. The Brexit assumption that it would replace the EU export markets has yet to be tested. President Trump was a strong supporter of Johnson and the Brexit campaign, but how that translates into trade negotiation is another unknown.
Tom Timberman is a lawyer, and former Foreign Service officer and economic development team leader/government adviser in war zones. He and his wife have lived in Kent County for 24 years.