Politics

Five times pro-Brexit headlines have been proved wrong

Between a fuel crisis and food shortages, it’s safe to say that Brexit is yet to deliver the sunlit uplands promised by its proponents. 

While none of the problems currently blighting Britain – from skyrocketing energy prices to natural gas shortages – can be blamed on Brexit alone, there is little doubt that the country’s uneasy new relationship with the European Union hasn’t made things any easier.

And people are starting to notice, with many dismayed onlookers pointing out the ever-widening chasm between expectation and reality just ten-and-a-bit months after the UK formally severed ties with Brussels.

Food prices

Expectation: A Daily Express splash from October 2018 vowed: “Cheaper food after EU exit.” It continued: “Breaking free from the EU will send the cost of food tumbling, economic experts said.”

Reality: Fast forward three years, and the very same paper sombrely reported: “As Britons face Christmas shortages, top boss deliver wake-up call. Stark warning get used to higher food bills.”

Farming

Expectation: At it again, the Express said in March 2017 that the “idea that farming will collapse after Brexit is absurd.”

Reality: Four years later, from the same paper: “Farming disaster: Brexiteer admits many farmers will go out of business due to EU exit.”

Fishing

Expectation: One of Brexit’s most hotly-contested battlegrounds. In 2016, the tabloids told us: “More reason to leave: Brexit Britain to take back control of its fishing waters.”

Reality: From March 2021: “We didn’t vote for this! Fishing collapse as UK firms go bust and exporters flee to EU.”

Gas bills

Expectation: Pre-referendum, The Sun splashed with an exclusive from Boris Johnson: “EU’ll never believe it: Boris promises cheaper houeshold gas bills if Brits back Brexit”.

Reality: And now? Again from The Sun: “Gastastrophe: Why your gas bill is about to soar and what you can do about it”.

NHS

Expectation: The biggest bluff of them all? In June 2018, The Sun reported: “Brexit health bonanza: NHS to get extra £384 million a week – that’s more than on the Brexit battle bus.”

Reality: By the time July 2021 came round, it was a different story: “Social care wage raid: Boris and Rishi eye National Insurance hike to pay for social care – smashing Tory manifesto promise.”

Related: Express tells readers how to get around Brexit rules for a longer EU holiday

Henry Goodwin

Henry is a reporter with a keen interest in politics and current affairs. He read History at the University of Cambridge and has a Masters in Newspaper Journalism from City, University of London. Follow him on Twitter: @HenGoodwin.

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