The UK was set to be officially leaving the EU today. It’s a strange feeling that’s hard to put into words. It’s been delayed, of course.
How the UK got to
this situation in the first place is a moot point. Its roots can be traced back
to the end of World War II, yet were channelled by the tabloid press in earnest
during the last thirty years, who successfully ushered in the notion that
somehow the European Community has been an invading, hostile force, in which
the UK has constantly seen its sovereignty undermined – rather than the
reality, which is that the UK helped shape EU laws as a large member-state,
rather than have laws imposed on it. This quite deliberate campaign has been relentless in its stream of anti-EU propaganda, propagated by tabloid owners based in tax havens. The image propagated by the tabloids of
plucky 'us', the underdog dictated to by 'them', is something that writer
Fintan O’Toole picked up on with this article, which locates Brexit as a result
of the English psych about World War II. It can’t be a coincidence that many of
the British films that have been in the cinemas in the last few years have been
about WWII, from Gary Oldman playing Winston Churchill to Dunkirk to, well, this. While cinema
in other European countries has addressed head-on all kinds of contemporary, a
good deal of British films have retreated to nostalgia about Britain’s finest
hour, standing alone against an invading Europe.
Something was
continually repeated during the referendum was the mantra “taking back control
of money, borders and laws” – despite the fact that the UK never really lost
control of all three. The UK never entered in the Eurozone, and thus uses its
own sovereign currency; while a member of the EU, the UK has had a
theoretically permanent opt-out from using the Euro. The vast majority of laws
have always been made in Westminster, as the Government’s own white paper
confirmed. The UK may have not been able to make its own individual trade laws,
but as part of the EU it has had sufficient clout when spearheading trade deals
together with the other member states to take on the USA and China. Meanwhile,
the UK’s exemption from the Schengen zone has meant that even UK citizens have
to show their passport when returning from other EU member states. The only UK
border that can be said to be ‘open’ in any meaningful sense is the one with
the Republic of Ireland – a situation that the UK agreed to, and which involves
a complicated confluence of factors, including the Common Travel Area agreement
between the two countries; the Good Friday Agreement; and the fact that both
countries have been in the EU up until now, thus guaranteeing the same
standards for everything from goods to livestock rules. The inconvenient problem of the border was circumnavigated by the leading Brexiters by simply ignoring it. Instead, the pro-leave leaflet that I received through the post at the time of the referendum obsessed over Turkey (along with a number of other Eastern European countries) joining the EU, despite the fact that discussions over Turkey joining the EU have effectively come to an end:
Not only did the tabloids manage to exploit the unfounded fear of Turkey joining the EU, but the leaflet above also heavily implied that the EU's borders would shortly be facing war-torn Iraq and Syria, instilling the idea that it would be easy for jihadists from those countries to walk into EU territory.
At the same time as this, what has become more and more obvious during the political chaos that has engulfed Britain in the last two years is that many of the right-wing thinktanks, institutes and pressure groups that have emerged from the shadows into the public eye, such as the European Research Group (ERG) and the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), have used the spectre of no-deal Brexit, or 'Hard Brexit' in which the UK severs all ties, precisely for reasons of self-interest. Sometime in the 2000s, Conservative MP’s Jacob Rees-Mogg’s father, Lord William Rees-Mogg, wrote a book called The Sovereign Individual, which detailed how one can exploit economic chaos and civil unrest for personal benefit by shorting the pound (or dollar, or yen, or whatever the local currency is). That’s precisely what many people did in the resulting economic downturn that happened, on both sides of the Atlantic (as captured in the film The Big Short).
Not only did the tabloids manage to exploit the unfounded fear of Turkey joining the EU, but the leaflet above also heavily implied that the EU's borders would shortly be facing war-torn Iraq and Syria, instilling the idea that it would be easy for jihadists from those countries to walk into EU territory.
At the same time as this, what has become more and more obvious during the political chaos that has engulfed Britain in the last two years is that many of the right-wing thinktanks, institutes and pressure groups that have emerged from the shadows into the public eye, such as the European Research Group (ERG) and the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), have used the spectre of no-deal Brexit, or 'Hard Brexit' in which the UK severs all ties, precisely for reasons of self-interest. Sometime in the 2000s, Conservative MP’s Jacob Rees-Mogg’s father, Lord William Rees-Mogg, wrote a book called The Sovereign Individual, which detailed how one can exploit economic chaos and civil unrest for personal benefit by shorting the pound (or dollar, or yen, or whatever the local currency is). That’s precisely what many people did in the resulting economic downturn that happened, on both sides of the Atlantic (as captured in the film The Big Short).
Groups such as
the ERG remain shadowy, murky entities. They have been frequently accused of
breaking parliamentary rules in their use of public funds in promoting a
partisan view of politics rather than objective research. The ERG in particular
has openly plotted to oust Theresa May in the last few months.
As it turns out,
they are just one of many groups which all advocate similar plans. All believe
strongly in strengthening ties between UK and the US while distancing the UK
from the rest of Europe – an ethos that was central to The Atlantic Bridge, a
group that was set up in 1997 by current UK secretary for independent trade,
Liam Fox, who has close links to the Trump administration.
The rise of these
groups, and with it the popularity of politicians such as Rees-Mogg, has
alarming implications for the National Health Service (NHS). They advocate free market economic views,
including a rolling back on workplace regulations, food labelling laws, and
environmental protections, with Rees-Mogg commenting on the latter: "If it’s
good enough for India, it’s good enough for here". This systematic culling of
most state intervention would include a deregulated economy in which tax havens
would thrive. These groups advocate getting rid of 'red tape' and 'bureaucracy'.
The UK will be in
a situation in which it will be at the mercy of other countries in trying to
strike trade deals. Brexit, and especially a no-deal Brexit, is likely to lead
to a situation in which there will be increasing financial pressure on the NHS,
exacerbated by the falling value of the pound. As a UK In A Changing Europe
report puts it, "There are likely to be further pressures on public-service
funding more broadly from a hit to economic growth caused by Brexit. This will
mean tough choices for the Government. It could decide to increase healthcare
funding, but this will have to come from raising taxes, borrowing or diverting
funds from other priorities".
These "tough
choices" could lead to cuts to NHS spending and staff wages. Another right-wing
pressure group, The Taxpayers Alliance, advocate an insurance-based health
system involving increased charges for services. Those charges would fall on
ordinary citizens. It could also lead to NHS Trusts being maligned and left to
fail.
Indeed, the US could demand, as part of a free trade deal, a stake in an NHS
already reeling from a fall of around 96% in recruitment of nurses from other
EU countries. The result could be a situation in which American healthcare
companies could make money off sick and vulnerable patients.
Such a deal could
mean that the NHS could take on the form of American-style healthcare, where
large sums are paid for surgery and caps on pharmaceutical prescription prices
are dismantled. The result could be that many patients could be left in debt to
the tune of thousands of pounds.
This opening up
of the NHS to foreign competition could theoretically also lead to investment
protection measures such as Investor-State Dispute Settlements (ISDS), in which
transnational corporations could claim compensation from the NHS if they
believe that their investments have been harmed by the breaching of treaties.
This wasn’t the
vision that some Brexiters had in mind. Instead, Vote Leave promised the public
shorter waiting times and £350 million per week. This vision was summed up
during the EU referendum campaign with videos such as 'Which NHS will you vote
for?', which unambiguously depicts the NHS as better off post-Brexit:
Yet it was a
member of Vote Leave, the MEP Daniel Hannan, who would go on to found the
Institute for Free Trade (IFT), who are now advocating a new trade deal in
conjunction with the Cato Institute – a libertarian right-wing organisation
based in the US that advocates Ayn Rand-style politics, in which Government
intervention is significantly rolled back. The IFT/Cato Institute advocate the
removal of tariffs, and EU regulations – and the opening up the NHS to foreign
competition. The Cato Institute has hosted lectures by the likes of Leave.EU
founder Aaron Banks, who has made no secret of his desire to see the NHS fully
privatised.
As the IFT/Cato
Institute’s report puts it: “Health services are an area where both sides would
benefit from openness to foreign competition…The United Kingdom should push as
hard as possible for the United States to allow U.K. goods and services
providers to have access to U.S. procurement markets, and open its procurement
to U.S. companies, as well…the United States and United Kingdom – traditionally
two of the world’s leading supporters of free trade – may be able to craft a
free trade agreement that reshapes the model by pushing it in the direction of
more trade liberalization and less governance”.
The IFT are not
the only right-leaning think tank obsessed with dismantling the NHS. The IEA is
another. Its news editor, Kate Andrews, a prominent lobbyist for private
healthcare companies, opined in an article in The Spectator that “reform of the
NHS is long overdue, and no amount of balloons or birthday cake can district
from this obvious truth”; she also appeared on Newsnight to ram the message
home. The IEA’s paper, 'Universal Healthcare Without The NHS', claims that "the
evidence on the quasi-market reforms [of the NHS] is overwhelmingly positive,
even if it could never be strong enough to convince the die-hard critics".
These right-wing
groups advocate a hard Brexit because the resulting chaos – similar to what
Naomi Klein describes in The Shock Doctrine – would provide a perfect
opportunity for them to seize natural assets and short the pound. This is what The
Sovereign Individual presciently predicted ten years ago, and which was borne
out in the financial crash taking place at the time the book was published. As Andrew Simms has pointed out in Cancel The Apocalypse, "This kind of economic shock therapy has been employed for decades, ranging from Pinochet's coup in Chile in 1973 to the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Asian Financial crisis in 1997 and Hurricane Mitch in 1998...it also seems to have been used in response to the massive financial market failure of 2007-8 in Europe and and the United States".
It’s for this
reason that they have financial interests in seeing the NHS privatised. As a
member of a pressure group called Keep Our NHS Public, it’s become obvious that
the NHS is one of the big prizes that the Brexiters have their sight on.
As mentioned above, a parallel can be
drawn with what happened in Russia following the collapse of the Soviet Union,
in which wealthy oligarchs became rich at the expense of both the ordinary
public and public services. It’s not hyperbole to suggest that this is what
could happen to the UK once we finally do leave the EU.
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