The dysfunction of the UK government as it struggles to
come to some decision as to how to proceed given the upcoming deadline for European
Union exit is readily apparent. Hari
Kunzru provides an article in the New
York Review of Books that discusses the reasons why the nation placed
itself in such dire straits. It is titled
Fool Britannia and was generated as a
review of a book by Fintan O’Toole: Heroic
Failure: Brexit and the Politics of Pain.
What emerges from Kunzru’s piece for the reader in the United States is
that we are only slightly less dysfunctional than the UK, and the reasons for
our problems are quite similar.
The US has its blue states and red states, and all 50
have differing views on social and political issues. The United Kingdom is not nearly as united as
it might appear to the casual observer.
It is dominated by England in terms of size and population, but it
includes Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, all of which have historical
and cultural differences with England.
It is the border shared by Northern Ireland and the nation of Ireland
that produces the major sticking point between the UK and EU. How can one maintain a free and open land
border between the two entities and at the same time accommodate two different
sets of regulations on trade with other nations? That issue could, and probably should,
torpedo Brexit entirely. The US has
similar problems with, for example, red states and blue states moving in
different directions on the regulations of firearms and environmental issues. Will
open borders between states be maintained, or will we need border checkpoints
for detecting the transport of illegal weapons?
The US, with its centuries of slavery and Jim Crow
regulations, continues to struggle with racial issues. African Americans still must deal with forms
of discrimination that complicate their lives.
The Hispanic population has grown considerably in recent generations
with that growth being augmented by undocumented immigrants who penetrated the
border or have overstayed a visa. More
recently, refugees from both Central America and the Middle East have been
added to the flow and caused considerable political strife. The analogous situation in the UK involves
its history as a colonial power. The
British Empire became the British Commonwealth and allowed many natives of
former colonies to obtain residency in the UK.
Joining the EU required the UK to welcome residents of other EU
countries, a growth of foreigners analogous to workers leaking through the US
border. Finally, the UK was faced with
accommodating the more generous EU treatment of the many refugees pouring out
of the Middle East. It was issues
related to the growing multicultural nature of society that contributed to
Brexit and the election of Donald Trump.
Kunzru provides this perspective on race in the UK.
“In Tinker Tailor Soldier
Spy, one of a body of thrillers that are also among the most acute literary
portrayals of the British establishment’s experience of postwar decline, John
Le Carré’s hero, George Smiley, goes to see Connie Sachs, a motherly drunk who
was once a secret service librarian and is now a repository of institutional
secrets. ‘Poor Loves,’ she says of George and his colleagues, her ‘boys.’ ‘Trained
to Empire, trained to rule the waves. All gone. All taken away. Bye-bye, world.’
Many of those who took it away were, of course, foreigners, particularly those
former colonial subjects who unaccountably agitated for decolonization. Their
arrival ‘over here’ was one of the most visible changes to postwar Britain, and
as O’Toole points out, the rhetoric—'swamping,’ being a stranger in one’s own
country, strain on public services, and so on—that was once used to demonize
new arrivals from the Commonwealth has been repurposed for use on EU migrants.
O’Toole argues provocatively that the decline of what might be called
traditional British racism made room for a new anti-Europeanism, as if there’s
a fixed national quantum of xenophobia that must find an object if the United
Kingdom is to maintain its integrity.”
An important aspect of support for Brexit comes from
conservatives who resent the decline in influence and power of what was once
the mighty British Empire. Brexit is an
attempt by many to “Make England Great Again” (MEGA?). Note the use of England rather than Britain
or the United Kingdom. Kunzru makes it
clear that it is England that is driving Brexit. Analogous to the situation in the US, there
is also a rural/urban divide in England.
London dominates England and its economy, and it is tightly coupled to
the EU. It was the non-urban rural voters
who carried the day for both Brexit and Trump.
Both the US and the English think of themselves as “exceptional”
nations with a history and culture that sets them apart and makes them superior
to other nations. Kunzru tells the
reader that England is beset by a “deep sense of grievance and a high sense of
superiority,” a description that fits well the diehard supporters Trump has
generated. When the decision to join the
EU was made, many thought the English would rise to their natural role as
rulers of the union.
“For many commentators writing
at the time of Britain’s entry into the Common Market in 1973, dominance in
Europe was to be compensation for the loss of empire. ‘What about Prince
Charles as Emperor?’ asked Nancy Mitford, facetiously expressing the secret
belief of many British people that Europe could be a new vehicle for old global
ambitions. The discovery that the role of ‘first among equals’ wasn’t on offer
led to a loss of enthusiasm for Europeanism, which suddenly appeared in a
different and sinister light, as a form of subordination to old enemies.”
Surprisingly, many Brits see themselves as having
defeated the Germans in WWII only to lose the nation to them in peacetime.
“Though the Suez Crisis and
imperial decline loom large in the imagination of Brexit, O’Toole writes that
it’s ‘the war’ that is ‘crucial in structuring English feeling about the
European Union.’ For half a century, English soccer fans have lamely taunted
their more successful German counterparts by chanting that their country has
won ‘two World Wars and one World Cup.’ Since the 1960s, comic books with names
like Commando, Warlord, and Battle Picture Weekly have kept World War II alive in the
minds of British boys with violent stories of ‘daring bomber raids over
Germany, through close-combat jungle fighting against hard-as-nails Japanese,
and depth-charge blasted submarine warfare, to hard-hitting battles across
North Africa, Italy and northern Europe’.”
“Crucially, the equation of a ‘European
superstate’ with a project of German domination is part of what O’Toole calls
the ‘mental cartography’ of English conservatism. In 1989 Margaret Thatcher
showed François Mitterand a map (taken out of her famous handbag) outlining
German expansion under the Nazis, in order to demonstrate her misgivings about
German reunification. On January 7 of this year, the pro-Remain
Conservative MP Anna Soubry was forced to pause a live TV interview
outside Parliament as protesters sang, ‘Soubry is a Nazi, Soubry is a Nazi
la-la-la-la.’ The European Union is, to these people, just a stealthy way for
the Germans to complete Hitler’s unfinished business.”
This sense of exceptionalism and superiority has even
driven some to welcome a disastrous No Deal Brexit, which would generate shortages
of many materials and significant economic disruption, as a means of
regenerating the presumed more heroic British character of times past.
“On December 16, the former
Brexit secretary Dominic Raab tweeted, ‘Remainers believe UK prosperity depends
on its location, Brexiters believe UK prosperity depends on its character.’
Faith in Brexit does indeed seem to correlate with belief in the existence of
national character, an innate and invariant set of shared qualities that
apparently includes an aptitude for governance. On December 30 an editorial in
London’s Sunday Times spluttered: ‘After more than four decades in
the EU we are in danger of persuading ourselves that we have forgotten how to
run the country by ourselves. A people who within living memory governed a
quarter of the world’s land area and a fifth of its population is surely
capable of governing itself without Brussels’.”
“The underside of nostalgia for
an imperial past is a horror of finding the tables turned. For the more
unhinged Brexiteers, leaving the EU takes on the character of a victorious army
coming home with its spoils.”
The decline in importance of the UK as a nation produced
a “deep sense of grievance and a high sense of superiority,” leading to the
Brexit dilemma. The US shares many of
the characteristics, both historical and cultural, of the British. As our influence and ability to dominate the
world inevitably diminishes, we are also seeing arise a “deep sense of grievance
and a high sense of superiority.” Donald
Trump feeds those emotions. One can only
hope that we will learn from the UK lesson to tame our ambitions and make them
consistent with the changing world in which we live. The US does not need an equivalent to the
foolishness of Brexit in its future.
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