Opinion

Brexiters say we’re not Brexiting right – are they missing the obvious?

Back in 2018, less than two years after the question on the UK’s membership within the European Union was “put to bed”, I posed the following question; What happens when populism fails to deliver on its far-flung promises?

By then it had become clear that many of the headline campaign pledges had been misleading at best and complete falsehoods at worse. As we noted at the time:

“There will be no “taking back control” at the end, no money for the NHS or British jobs for British people. Rather we have to face the reality that we will be worse off in all scenarios when Britain leaves the EU, hardly the land of milk and honey that was promised in the referendum.”

Reaction

But what is fascinating about how events have played out is how those who drove the populist movement have reacted to it going down hill.

This weekend the Leave Alliance took an extraordinary swipe at Remainers for not allowing the government to Brexit ‘properly’.

The campaign group, which argues that Britain made a “fundamental mistake” by joining the EU in 1973, posted a thread on Twitter saying:

“These days I’m heavily sceptical of #Brexit and the mess it will surely be, but we are where we are primarily because we had to fight for it three times. Voting in good faith in a referendum wasn’t enough. Remainers own this mess as much as the Tories.”

Brexit mess

But surely they are missing the obvious here.

As Brian Cox pointed out, the notion that Boris Johnson and co are being forced into doing something stupid by people who voted remain is just nonsensical.

Our pro-Brexit administration has a huge majority in parliament and could theoretically steer this in any direction they want to – and indeed they have.

Negotiations with the EU seem to have stalled as we head towards a hard exit from the union. The chances of an extension, made necessary due to Covid implications, are also slim given that the very same administration has written out any such move in law.

Own it

This outcome is about as far away from the will of the Remainers as you could possibly get, and so blaming them on creating this outcome is absurd.

As Martin Broadhurst said: “You lot were supposed to have a plan but there never was one. Every point from Remainers was dismissed as project fear. Yet here we are, with checks on the Irish sea and no deal looming, to name two scenarios we were told wouldn’t happen.”

Claire Savage quite rightly added: “(Remainers) said it was a mistake from day one.”

This is your shit – own it.

Related: Authoritarianism, to what end?

Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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