Boris Johnson leaves a press conference after announcing a Brexit trade deal had finally been agreed. Getty
Boris Johnson leaves a press conference after announcing a Brexit trade deal had finally been agreed. Getty
Boris Johnson leaves a press conference after announcing a Brexit trade deal had finally been agreed. Getty
Boris Johnson leaves a press conference after announcing a Brexit trade deal had finally been agreed. Getty

The Brexit deal is not going to make the far-right disappear


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For a while it seemed as if the UK might leave the EU on the worst possible terms, resulting from a "no-deal Brexit". But on Christmas Eve, Britain struck an agreement with the European Union for a free-trade agreement. A collective sigh of relief followed. But what does this new world of post-EU membership mean for the UK?

Britain is still a part of the European continent, EU membership or not. And a number of other European countries, such as Switzerland and Norway, have resisted joining the Union. But the UK is not going to be like either of them. It is the first country on the continent to have been a former member. And with that comes a great deal of baggage, which we have yet to fully appreciate and understand.

Many analysts have rightly pointed out the potential economic impacts of this rather foolhardy endeavour. Within the EU, the UK had a particularly privileged economic and political position, as compared with any other member state. There was already a perception that Britain was having its cake and eating it too.

That is now over. As a recent report from King's College London noted, we are indeed getting a Canada-style trade deal. But it is not similar to the one Canadians have with the EU. It is like the one Canadians have with the US, which operates on a completely different basis. The US is Canada's main trading partner – not the other way round. Canada is in a tremendously weaker position in any negotiation, as compared to the US for whom Canada represents a minor trade partner. This is now the UK's lot when it comes to the EU, and it will not be pretty.

A vehicle passes an anti-Brexit pro-Irish unity billboard seen from the Dublin road in Newry, Northern Ireland, October 1, 2019. AFP
A vehicle passes an anti-Brexit pro-Irish unity billboard seen from the Dublin road in Newry, Northern Ireland, October 1, 2019. AFP

But this is not just about economics. Following the Brexit referendum of 2016, I met with a notable English lecturer at the University of Cambridge. We discussed at length the future of the far-right in the UK. Indeed, this particular lecturer had been sceptical of the EU in the first place, because of his worries that the far-right was mainstreaming quite dramatically within different EU countries. He was concerned that the far-right might thus eventually negatively impact European institutions – and that would also have repercussions here in the UK.

When we met, though, we discussed the possibility that Brexit might be somehow overturned. He pointed out that if that happened, the far-right in the UK would become more radicalised, out of a sense of being cheated, which was hardly the desired outcome.

Perhaps then, Brexit has avoided this type of radicalisation. But at what cost? The Brexit deal is not going to make the far-right disappear. On the contrary, as a force in British politics, such elements may simply continue under another name, where they will have yet more currency, and far more space to go mainstream.

A Brexit trade agreement was struck between Britain and the EU after four years of negotiations. AFP
A Brexit trade agreement was struck between Britain and the EU after four years of negotiations. AFP

There is virtually no scenario where the British economy will not contract over the coming years. There will be difficult times ahead. The question then becomes, how will the British political elite on the right respond to that? Will they be honest and say this is the inevitable consequence of the choice to leave the EU? Or will they take their cue from those with even more extreme views, blaming "external forces", especially the EU, for the predicament we find ourselves in?

I suspect the latter. It has already been the case that blaming the EU, which is not responsible for the UK's political choices, is cynically used so that the UK can shirk its responsibilities. And it does not stop there. In Britain, we also run the risk of seeing an increase in anger, but through an ever more fringe and far-right lens, over immigration issues, which have already been present in large parts of the electorate for some time.

The UK is experiencing a surge in migrants crossings, December 4, France. AFP
The UK is experiencing a surge in migrants crossings, December 4, France. AFP

Where does that leave us, then? In the same place, but only worse. Already we have lacked political leadership, someone of calibre who would not respond to base populism by bending to it but by challenging it. If we had a different kind of leader, we might have averted Brexit altogether and instead helped reform the EU from within.

At the very least, the UK, under more capable leadership, could have struck a better deal, one in which we stayed within the single market. The effects of this narrow parochialism are not just about EU membership, but about preventing the empowerment of the worst parts of our society. Warding those off must continue, irrespective of Brexit.

Dr HA Hellyer, a Carnegie Endowment scholar, is a senior fellow at the Royal United Services Institute and Cambridge University

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From Dubai-based clinical psychologist Daniella Salazar:

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