[Like all good dramas, the Brexit story has been shocking, dramatic
and upsetting. But its ending is not yet written.]

https://next.ft.com/content/8f2aca88-3c51-11e6-9f2c-36b487ebd80a

I do not believe that Brexit will happen

There will be howls of rage, but why should extremists on both sides
dictate how the story ends?

Gideon Rachman

JUNE 27, 2016 by: Gideon Rachman

All good dramas involve the suspension of disbelief. So it was with
Brexit. I went to bed at 4am on Friday depressed that Britain had
voted to leave the EU. The following day my gloom only deepened. But
then, belatedly, I realised that I have seen this film before. I know
how it ends. And it does not end with the UK leaving Europe.

Any long-term observer of the EU should be familiar with the shock
referendum result. In 1992 the Danes voted to reject the Maastricht
treaty. The Irish voted to reject both the Nice treaty in 2001 and the
Lisbon treaty in 2008.

And what happened in each case? The EU rolled ever onwards. The Danes
and the Irish were granted some concessions by their EU partners. They
staged a second referendum. And the second time around they voted to
accept the treaty. So why, knowing this history, should anyone believe
that Britain’s referendum decision is definitive?

It is true that the British case has some novel elements. The UK has
voted to leave the EU altogether. It is also a bigger economy than
Ireland or Denmark, which changes the psychology of the relationship.
And it is certainly true that the main actors in the drama seem to
think it is for real. David Cameron, the UK prime minister, announced
his resignation following the vote; and Jonathan Hill, Britain’s EU
commissioner for financial services, has followed suit.

Yet there are already signs that Britain might be heading towards a
second referendum rather than the door marked exit. Boris Johnson, a
leader of the Leave campaign and Britain’s probable next prime
minister, hinted at his real thinking back in February, when he said:
“There is only one way to get the change we need — and that is to vote
to go; because all EU history shows that they only really listen to a
population when it says No.”

Having been a journalist in Brussels at the time of the Danish
referendum on Maastricht, Mr Johnson is very familiar with the history
of second referendums. It is also well known that he was never a
diehard Leaver, and hesitated until the last moment before deciding
which side to back.

His main goal was almost certainly to become prime minister;
campaigning to leave the EU was merely the means to that end. Once Mr
Johnson has entered 10 Downing Street, he can reverse his position on
the EU.

But would our European partners really be willing to play along? Quite
possibly. You could see that in the talk by Wolfgang Schäuble’s
finance ministry in Germany of negotiating an “associate” membership
status for Britain. In reality, the UK already enjoys a form of
associate membership since it is not a participant in the EU’s single
currency or the Schengen passport-free zone. Negotiating some further
ways in which the country could distance itself from the hard core of
the bloc, while keeping its access to the single market, would merely
elaborate on a model that already exists.

And what kind of new concession should be offered? That is easy. What
Mr Johnson would need to win a second referendum is an emergency brake
on free movement of people, allowing the UK to limit the number of EU
nationals moving to Britain if it has surged beyond a certain level.

In retrospect, it was a big mistake on the part of the EU not to give
Mr Cameron exactly this concession in his renegotiation of the UK’s
terms of membership early this year. It was the prime minister’s
inability to promise that Britain could set an upper limit on
immigration that probably ultimately lost him the vote.

Even so, with 48 per cent of voters opting to stay in the union, the
result was extremely close. If the Remain campaign could fight a
second referendum with a proper answer to the question of immigration
it should be able to win fairly easily.

But why should Europe grant Britain any such a concession on free
movement? Because, despite all the current irritations, the British
are valuable members of the EU. The UK is a big contributor to the
budget and it is a serious military and diplomatic power.

Just as it will be painful for the UK to lose access to the EU’s
internal market, so it will be painful for the EU to lose access to
the British labour market. More than 3m EU nationals live and work in
Britain, with more than 800,000 from Poland alone.

Agreeing to an emergency brake on free movement of people might mean
some modest limits to future migration. But that would surely be
better than the much harsher restrictions that could follow a complete
British withdrawal from the EU.

Of course, there would be howls of anger on both sides of the Channel
if any such deal is struck. The diehard Leavers in Britain would cry
betrayal, while the diehard federalists in the European Parliament —
who want to punish the UK and press on with “political union” in
Europe — will also resist any new offer.

But there is no reason to let the extremists on both sides of the
debate dictate how this story has to end. There is a moderate middle
in both Britain and Europe that should be capable of finding a deal
that keeps the UK inside the EU.

***Like all good dramas, the Brexit story has been shocking, dramatic
and upsetting. But its ending is not yet written.*** [Emphasis added.]

[email protected]

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to