I haven't weighed in on Brexit-related news in a while, but I think it's time.
I may be an American, but to be honest probably most of my friends online are British, so I wind up following developments in the UK a lot, on top of which the governmental chaos of this month has made headlines even here (outside of just the usual PBS News Hour coverage and American BBC broadcasts, I mean). Anyway, one theme I keep hearing is that there are likely to be new elections in the relatively near future, as in before Christmas. I'd like to weigh in on that today.
If a new election were to be held and I lived there, I'd vote for the Liberal Democrats. I was initially a big fan of Jeremy Corbyn's left wing, even quasi-socialist, ideas (I am a socialist), but have been underwhelmed by how he has navigated the age of Brexit so far. He clearly supports Brexit in principle and that's his main problem. He and the Labour Party have been remarkably unable to stake out a clear position on the most pressing issue of the day in the UK, which is precisely Brexit. If a no-deal Brexit comes to pass, we are seriously talking about shortages of food and medical supplies and the recolonization of Northern Ireland, with the possibility of resumed armed conflict that that could bring! No other issue can even compare in significance for the UK at this time. Because they can't decide their position on the most basic issue facing the country, Labour has instead focused on, you know, expanding the Gender Recognition Act (de-medicalizing gender identity transition for all legal purposes) and other shit I fail to sympathize with as their leading goals. They've been leading the way on this type of IMO reactionary social policy instead.
This is why the Remain Party came in second place in the British elections to the EU this summer, knocking the Labour Party into third place. The same type of thing could happen in a national election methinks, frankly, considering that the Liberal Democrats have managed to stake out a position of clear and definite opposition to this rolling disaster that has already sent Britain's economy into a state of contraction as of the last quarter and seriously threatens much, much worse. Any new election held in the near future will be a one-issue election essentially; a new referendum on Brexit. Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party doesn't get that. Jo Swinson's Liberal Democrats do.
Jo Swinson's clear and straightforward position is that Article 50 should be revoked, halting the Brexit process. The somehow-governing Conservatives TRIED to make that sound like a scary proposition recently, but the effort backfired spectacularly. A petition to revoke Article 50 has acquired over 6 million signatures, making it the most signed petition in UK history.
(Incidentally, Scotland's highest court yesterday ruled that Boris Johnson's suspension of parliament was illegal. The Irish high court is expected to follow suit on different legal grounds today. I thought these developments were also worth noting as an aside.)
Frankly, Labour should be embarrassed that the neoliberals who run the Liberal Democratic Party, who once propped up a Conservative government themselves earlier this decade, have actually emerged as the main and most principled opposition to the isolationist far right that now governs Conservative Party politics and therefore the UK. They (Labour) can, and I suspect in fact probably will, pay a political price for their relative neutrality on the most important issue of the day.
Last edited by Jaicee - on 12 September 2019