All parties of any age have ghosts that haunt them: spectres from disasters of the past so great that they dare not be forgotten yet dare not be truly remembered either. Indeed, they may not really be remembered in detail at all; their legacy today lying not in memory or even mythology but in the culture and behaviour that evolved to ward off the evil spirits; a culture buried so deep that it never really need be explained other than a short ‘that’s not how we do things here’ to the new and the naive.
Comments
Not at all. She will retain the option of No Brexit.
Even if they are right that the end destination offers the UK opportunities that are closed to us within the EU (and it didn't look that way back in the 1970s as we were overtaken by our European competitors), the question of whether the price of breaking from B back to A is worth paying to access these is never properly considered.
Big changes always win more enemies than friends. I think the Conservatives have already lost a chunk of their traditional AB/business support for a long time, and they are struggling to adapt their offering to the new position of having as much C1/2DE support as Labour. If the latter people end disillusioned with what Brexit delivers them - which appears almost inevitable given the unrealistic expectations raised by Leave's thoroughly disingenuous selling exercise - then the Tories, who will remain tied to Brexit in voters' minds for a generation, will have an enduring political problem.
When the result of the referendum on membership in the EU was announced in the UK, many commentators immediately announced that it had been delivered by the ‘left-behind’ white working class. The equivalent constituency in the US was subsequently argued to have secured Trump the presidency. Yet in both places it has been demonstrated that the white working class vote was less significant than that of the white middle class.
So the question needs to be asked: why is the white working class being held responsible for decisions taken by the white middle classes?
http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/brexit/2017/11/10/why-are-the-white-working-classes-still-being-held-responsible-for-brexit-and-trump/
http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/brexit/2017/11/10/britain-has-most-often-taken-positions-against-the-majority-in-the-council-of-the-european-union/
The past is a different country and we cannot return to where we were pre entry. That was a time when we still were a major manufacturing economy and most of those markets were in the Empire and Commonwealth. Apart from anything else manufacturing no longer is a mass employer of semi skilled labour.
Brexit is radical change, but it is a reactive change, a nostalgia for a lost era.
https://twitter.com/marwood_lennox/status/925759368154570752
Apart from the top decile of prosperity being for Remain, there is very little correlation, and quite a significant number of the most deprived seats voted Remain. The thread concludes not with the question of why Stoke voted Leave, but why Aylesbury did.
https://twitter.com/marwood_lennox/status/925760600755658752
The correlation with age seems a lot stronger than with prosperity. Old people voted Leave, young for Remain. Brexit is forced on the young by the old and that in turn is part of the generational inequality that drove the June GE result. A few council houses and tinkering with student debt is not going to be enough. The Tories need to abandon Hard Brexit to get any chance of the under 50 vote back.
2) The Liberals didn't technically exist at all until 1859 - until then you should probably say 'non-Protectionist' coalitions as that is essentially what they were. Ironically the split over the Corn Laws was a key element in founding that as well. Moreover although the Conservatives didn't have a majority in this time they did of course have several spells in office, most notably 1866-68.
I would suggest a more exact parallel would be the Tariff Reform Movement of 1903 onwards, which dominated Conservative political thought for the next 29 years, cost them four elections one of which at least should have been unloseable and saw them repeatedly split within themselves before finally being enacted at the moment of least relevance and most damage.
It is also in many ways a better parallel because Labour, having been staunchly opposed to tariffs for most of its previous existence, promptly adopted it as a policy and took it much further and more aggressively than the Unionists/Conservatives ever had. And we all know Corbyn and Macdonnell will ultimately look for the hardest Brexit possible to implement their more radical ideas.
'This semester's module is on British political history, 22nd June-21st September 2016.
It is vital you attend all lectures as there is far too much to cover if you need to catch up.'
If Mrs May has a sense of duty to her country, she would do everything possible to avoid a crash Brexit. That would allow her to leave office - even if she were forced out by the loons in her party - with something of her reputation intact. It would be best for the country (and also the Tories) for a crash Brexit to be avoided.
But the country comes first. It is a pity that too many Tories fail to see that.
I did some lazy generalisation too in my young vs old argument!
The deprived places in England which went Remain are interesting. Liverpool is particularly anomolous, perhaps the Irish connection. The others seem to be mostly cities, so perhaps students and migrants. Leicester fits this, and voted Remain, while prosperous and adjacent Harborough voted Leave. I suspect that if it were possible to breakdown the Brexit result even more then within constituencies we would see similar patterns on a microscale. Studenty Clarendon Park for Remain, Saffron Lane Estate for Leave.
The Joseph Rowntree Trust did some interesting statistical work looking as to how voters behaved at the margin. While it is true that level of education was a strong indicator of Brexit voting the border area of voters with A levels but not degrees behaves differently. In prosperous areas these voted Remain, like graduates did, and in less prosperous areas like those with GCSE or less. The JRT put this down to opportunity.
All these things tend to intersect. More deprived areas tend to lose young and skilled to prosperous areas. The areas of England with declining population (Copeland for example) often voted Leave.
Ultimately we are all complex individuals and there are limits to this sort of determainistic social analysis.
Yep: voters with A-level education from low skilled communities had similar pro-Leave voting profiles to those with no education.......
...... Our findings, however, reject the dichotomous view of the low-educated Brexiter vs the high-educated Remainer, by showing that two groups with intermediate levels of education (voters with good GSCEs and A-levels) were more pro-Leave than the low-educated (those with no formal education and with low GSCE grades).
http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/brexit/2017/10/31/brexit-was-not-the-voice-of-the-working-class-nor-of-the-uneducated-it-was-of-the-squeezed-middle/
As Ben Goldacre writes 'I think you'll find its a bit more complicated than that'
But, if we are looking to the future then the question to ask is not the one the O Level History syllabus asked of why did we repeal the Corn Laws, but the much harder question of what was the effect of repealing the Corn Laws ?
Well, it certainly didn't achieve its principal goal of reducing the short term price of grain as there was none to import.
It did however allow the long term importation of grain and the underlying principle allowed the importation of beef from Chicago and the mid west. That destroyed the agricultural sector in the Britain in the 1870s and was not sorted out until the return of agricultural protectionism in the late 1930s.
Extension of A50 period is the most obvious way of avoiding car crash Brexit without cancelling Brexit.
We have yesterday passed the halfway point between Brexit vote and leaving date. 505 days each side. We are nowhere near halfway there, indeed we have barely started.
The most telling statistic since Brexit rose to the top of the UK political agenda is the almost disappearance of the very long-standing correlation between class (census category) and voting behaviour, as far as Con v Lab is concerned.
At the time of Peel, there was a strong and sensible opposition waiting to take over the running of the country. This is a luxury which we do not have now.
Why are the Conservatives so irresponsible?
'Last month, the World Bank said that, in the event of no trade deal beyond the minimal WTO terms, our trade with the EU would fall by two per cent. Since exports to the EU amount to 12.6 per cent of our total GDP, we’re talking about an overall loss of a quarter of one per cent. Set against our new commercial opportunities overseas, and our deregulatory opportunities at home, that doesn’t seem so bad.'
https://www.conservativehome.com/thecolumnists/2017/11/daniel-hannan-coercion-might-be-working-in-catalonia-but-it-wont-work-here.html
There is no doubt that if May had promised to stay in the single market and leave free movement uncontrolled and ECJ jurisdiction in place and made a big payment to the EU, she would have risked becoming a latter day Peel, the Tory Party would have been completely split and in all probability most of it would have voted against such a deal and even if it had got through, which also is not guaranteed given the working class Leave voters Corbyn wanted to keep on board, UKIP would have made big gains on a cry of disrespecting the Leave vote.
Instead we are heading for a Canada style deal in the long term which means no free movement and in the long run no ECJ jurisdiction but still a large payment to the EU. That has more chance of getting through and acceptance by Tory voters and MPs but the payment issue is still a contentious run and if it is put to Parliament Tory backbenchers like IDS and Rees Mogg, maybe even Boris would vote against it as well as some Labour MPs like Hoey and it would be reliant on support from the LDs, the SNP and most of the Labour Party to get through. There is no chance of it being completed by March 2019 but if an acceptable payment has been made clear progress on it can be made and if necessary a transition deal agreed for 2 years as May has suggested which can be put to Parliament before departure.
"In low-skilled communities the difference in support for leave between graduates and those with GCSEs was 20 points. In high-skilled communities it was over 40 points. In low-skill areas the proportion of A-level holders voting leave was closer to that of people with low-skills. In high-skill areas their vote was much more similar to graduates."
https://www.jrf.org.uk/report/brexit-vote-explained-poverty-low-skills-and-lack-opportunities
Time to be rid and to sail to a brighter future....
But I don't think that the ghost of Joe Chamberlain stalks today's Tories in the same way that Peel's does, which is crucial to the Party's behaviour and sense of self. (I did make a call Peel "the darkest of several ghosts that stalk the party" - that was my nod to the others that exist).
I did think about being more defined about the party names but to be honest, I could have spent three paragraphs going on about the origins and formation of what ultimately became the late-19th century Conservative and Liberal Parties but it's not really crucial to the piece. For our purposes, all we need to know is that Peel divided his party and his followers split in such a way that what became the Liberal Party - the coalition of Whigs, Peelites and Radicals - dominated the next quarter century, and to an extent, why.
In the US Trump won white no college graduates 67% to 28%, compared to white graduates who he won 49% to 45%. Non-white non college graduates went for Hillary 75% to 20% and non white graduates by 71% to 23%. On income the argument that it was the lower middle class which won it for Trump has more ground with Hillary winning those earning under $30k by 53% to 41% and those on $30 to 50k by 51% to 42%. Trump won those on $50k to $100k by 50% to 46%, those on $100k to $200k by 48% to 47%, those on $200k to 250k by 49% to 48% and those on more than $250k by 48% to 46%
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election,_2016
In the EU referendum BME voters voted Remain by 69% to 31% while white voters voted Leave by 54% to 46%. Upper middle class ABs voted Remain 59% to 41%, lower middle class C1s voted Remain by 52% to 48%, skilled working class C2s voted Leave by 62% to 38% and unskilled working class and unemployed DEs voted Leave by 64% to 36%. So clearly it was the white working class which won it for Leave in the UK.
https://www.ipsos.com/ipsos-mori/en-uk/how-britain-voted-2016-eu-referendum
Any sensible politician would have realised that unpicking a relationship of over 40 years duration would take time and should be done slowly and gradually and methodically and with some thought and care.
Instead we’ve had grandstanding and threats and bluff and bluster and time wasted on pointless fights.
I was glad that the Tories did not get a huge majority in June because they become unbearably arrogant when they do have such majorities. Now I’m beginning to wish that they would just crawl away into some dark corner never to be heard of again.
The Tories did win C1s too by 44% to 40% for Labour and C2s by 45% to 41% for Labour but Labour still won DEs by 47% to 38% for the Tories.
https://www.ipsos.com/ipsos-mori/en-uk/how-britain-voted-2017-election
Bleakly amusing were it not for the consequences .......
Bottom line is that the Tory hierarchy still looks, thinks and behaves as if its role is to represent the ABC1s (only) when this is no longer the case in the polling booth.
Neither of these factors is in our favour any longer. What other factors are in our favour? We have just ditched our entrepot status between the EU and the Anglophone world, and acted against the interests of our financial services industry. Our brand in culture, media and music is not helped by the xenophobia of Brexiteers.
In short, what reason do we have to live as we want to? Does the world owe us a living?
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/comment/may-humiliates-herself-at-the-eleventh-hour-fkc68n62c
In 2015 for example the Tories won ABs by 45% to 26% for Labour, C1s by 41% to 29% for Labour and C2s were tied on 32% each for the Tories and Labour. DEs voted Labour by 41% to 27%.
https://www.ipsos.com/ipsos-mori/en-uk/how-britain-voted-2015
https://www.conservativehome.com/thetorydiary/2017/11/why-the-government-is-resisting-calls-to-devolve-brexit-powers-at-once.html
And no, it’s not going to be easy, it’s not a ‘just leave’ situation.
As anyone who looks around them and thinks a bit can see.
There almost certainly will be some severe effects on the NHS; effect which are rarely discussed. And not just an exacerbation of staff shortages.
It's seems crystal clear why we are here. The Tories have been bitterly divided on Europe for decades, and having seen an existential threat to their perceived primacy decided they should put the question to the people and let them decide.
And so here we are. All the experts, business, industry, diplomats and the government's own assessments show how calamitous and insane a no-deal would be. Yet they pursue it anyway to try and placate their internal loons and thus keep the party together. Because maintaining the perceived primacy of the Conservative Party has been confused with the national interest.
Hubris. It will destroy them.
Now, if Brexit really does look that bad, it may be that ducking out in some way becomes an option - but don't underestimate the political and social consequences of any party and any government that does so. As with the Corn Laws, even if it is the right decision, there's a pretty good chance that it won't solve the immediate problem anyway.
The key determinant of how politics changes over the next decade or so is whether the current young carry forward their current attitudes into middle age, or whether they turn into their parents.
That doesn't affect the more serious charge, that he lost.
F1: third practice starts at 1pm, and qualifying at 4pm.
On-topic: the EU's attitude on judicial imperialism is indefensible. Alas, I agree a cliff-edge is possible. It's one reason I think we may end up remaining. We'll see.
Can it happen? Maybe we should think about China and how it destroyed and then rebuilt its entrepreneurial class.
Leaving the EU does not have to mean hurling ourselves off the cliff. Some leave voters may have objected to a sane Brexit, saying we had to be out of the EEA and CU as well. At which point a decent politician would ask them where those things were on the ballot paper - then we could have been in the realm of leavers wanting a second referendum on those other things.
I am not asking the government to back down from Brexit - I voted for it remember. I am asking them to back down from the lunacy of giving us less trading rights than Turkey. Leave the EU was half the question, the other half was "and do x". The Tories can't agree on x, and that is why we are this badly screwed.
Brexit is not just an economic decision, or an abtruse one about judicial sovereignty, it is a fundamental cultural view. Is Britain an ethno-state or a state based on ideas and values?
Yesterdays Yougov is illustrative of this. 70% of Remain voters think of Britons who were born abroad and then naturalised as British, while only 36% of Leavers do. The party breakdown is as one would expect from this:
https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/929231641641406464
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dghdvVbtowM
https://www.welt.de/politik/ausland/article170516511/Erdogan-befiehlt-Musliminnen-sich-zu-vermehren.html
it will be the tootbrush moustache next
Interestingly, buy to let's have collapsed, compared to ten years ago.
In the North East and Northern Ireland house prices have actually fallen compared to ten years ago.
The question is what happens when reality can no longer be denied. I doubt many Leavers will accept responsibility for their vote choice, so it will always make compromise very difficult.
I don't get the impression most Conservative MPs are enthusiastic about Brexit. I think they secretly wish it would just go away.
https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/925648309880066053
As a case in point - the estimates he is referring to only apply to UK exports of goods, and only apply to the reduction from tariffs.
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/164821505330746382/Short-term-impact-of-Brexit-on-the-United-Kingdoms-export-of-goods
For the UK, services are rather important. Also non tariff barriers for goods.
For an overall look- this World Bank paper estimates a 28% drop in value added from no deal.
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/853811484835908129/pdf/WPS7947.pdf
I think the likes of Alistair Meeks are sometimes tempted to turn the clock back to a time before universal suffrage than we can again get politicians who tell the masses what to do rather than having to respond to what the masses tell them to do at the ballot box.
"Absolutely nobody is talking about threatening our place in the single market."...
You can overstate this, the margins are slim (even big 'remain' or 'leave' votes are 60-40). But It think it may have made a big difference between voters who were generally unbothered but unenthusiastic about the EU feeling a sense of decline and opting to leave and feeling more optimistic and opting to stay in those areas - and ultimately, those voters, not the cartoon character racists or ludicrous Hannanites, are the ones who matter.
The sad thing of course is that Brexit will do nothing to solve these issues, even if it's not a complete disaster.
My daughter is house hunting at the moment. She is being offered a fairly high multiple of her salary but needs to produce a 25% deposit. When I bought my first house my deposit was less than 10%.