The EU referendum is tomorrow so
I thought it was time to offer my contribution to the debate.
I want to begin by saying that I
totally understand at least some of the reasons for Brexit. There is a
democratic deficit in the EU, it is very hard to answer the question which Tony
Benn asked of all in power: “How can I get rid of you”. Furthermore the EU has
at times enacted policies which disadvantage the global south. And across
western Europe immigration has been used as a tool to keep wages low, workers
from the east of Europe (and in earlier era, Eire, Portugal and southern Italy )
have been willing to move to the west and work for wages which we in the west
aren’t willing to work for. There is a legitimate argument to say that without
immigration wages for fruit pickers, cleaners, and manual jobs, would have
had to be higher, it’s simple market economics. For more than a generation the
middle class has enjoyed low prices for services on the back of low paid workers, immigration has been used as a tool to bring this about and as a consequence we’ve created
the phenomena at home of the disenfranchised poor who are angry at being stuck at the
bottom of the social ladder. This is not the fault of those immigrants, but it is they who feel the consequences of the anger of those who feel they have no voice.
I understand all this, but let’s
not pretend that for the last 43 years Britain has had this rise in inequality forced upon
her! Britain has been at the heart of driving through these economic realities;
more and more of our national freedom has been handed over to undemocratic
bodies willingly and enthusiastically by the politicians we have elected. It
isn’t just the EU, it is the WTO and the IMF as well. Why has this been done? to lock us into the neo-liberal economic system, to prevent us, "and our hard working families" from democratically changing this reality.
If these were the arguments for Brexit being proclaimed publicly then I would have some sympathy. But as it stands I see no reason to
believe that outside the EU that our government would act any differently, do
we believe that the Conservatives or Labour are about to tell the middle and
upper classes that retail prices will have to rise because there needs to be a
higher wage incentive to encourage British workers to pick fruit and vegetables?
Do we believe that our government is going to forego the easy option of
immigration and instead invest billions more into vocational training so that
our home workers will have the skills to do the jobs currently been done by
eastern European plumbers, builders, nurses, etc?
I don’t believe much would change
under Brexit. For too long British politicians have pushed EU policies which favour the wealthy, while using the EU as a scapegoat
for the negative consequences of policies that they have passionately
advocated and would have done so in or out of the EU.
What's more employment justice and fair wages are not something I want just for British workers, I want them for everyone, everywhere.
What's more employment justice and fair wages are not something I want just for British workers, I want them for everyone, everywhere.
So I get some of the reasons for
leaving. However I don’t think any of these are the reasons why most Brexiters are considering voting leave. I think it comes down to a far simpler national mindset,
Fear.
I have met people from all across
Europe, I have visited several EU countries, I have lived for a time in France.
These experience were vastly easier because we are in the EU. All across
Europe millions of people are enjoying the same privilege, to visit or to live and
work in a different country, to learn a different language, to eat different
food, to expand their vision of the world, to meet different people.
There are many Brits who take up
this opportunity which being in the EU affords us; but on the whole it saddens
me that as a country most of us don’t. We don’t take seriously learning other
languages, our young people don’t take seriously the opportunity to live for a
time in another EU country, we even turn our noses up at subtitled films; far
too often we look across our channel with a measure of suspicion or ridicule.
Why? I think it’s because we are
afraid. Fear is a natural reaction to the other, but the mature reaction to
fear is to get through it, to be able to see a higher good beyond the fear. The
immature reaction is to cower, to move backwards into a hole and then justify
our cowardice with self righteous affirmation. For too long this is how we as
Brits have acted towards our European neighbours. We are a nation of unadventurous cowards who
spend way too much time blaming others for our problems. We mask our
insecurities by consoling ourselves with a “we won the war”
superiority complex which just assumes that we are better than anyone else.
We have a media and a political class that feed and manipulate our fears. Because we are afraid we fall for their lies, to build higher walls, to create more scapegoats. It is to our shame as a country that we feel so threatened by Syrians and North Africans living in abject poverty in Calais. These people are not our enemies,
We have a media and a political class that feed and manipulate our fears. Because we are afraid we fall for their lies, to build higher walls, to create more scapegoats. It is to our shame as a country that we feel so threatened by Syrians and North Africans living in abject poverty in Calais. These people are not our enemies,
This is not healthy. As a nation
we need to address this fear.
Tomorrow I will be voting REMAIN.
Because I believe that all the
very real economic injustices facilitated by the EU would be pursued with just
as much vigour by the British government outside the EU. While at the same time
any more progressive voice we might one day have would be locked out of the conversation.
Above all else I am voting REMAIN
because I don’t want to live in a country which fears the outsider, I want to
look out across Europe with a sense of hope and adventure, how incredible the
opportunities we have! How amazing the peoples and cultures that we can
encounter! How privileged we are to be able to work and live anywhere we want
across our continent! How brilliant it is that we can build friendships with
Romanians, Bulgarians, Poles, Czechs, Belgians and Swedes. How impressive it is that Europe has lived
through so little war in the last 70 years! How fortunate we are not to have
felt the pain of famine at any point in our lifetimes!
So please, my fellow Brits, vote
REMAIN, but don’t just vote remain we need to do more than this; make the most
of this opportunity, encourage the young to learn languages, encourage them to
live and work in other countries, make the most of what we have; and beyond
everything else when you feel the fear of the other rising in your gut, stand up
to that fear and force yourself to look outward.
Well done Matt. This was something I posted recently.
ReplyDeleteI want to live in a country that has a positive attitude and wants to contribute to building a a better world, not a mean spirited country that just thinks about itself. The poverty and dissillusionment that we now see in Britain and other EU countries is the result of the gross inequality that now exists and an economic system that promotes this growing inequality. Coming out of the EU will make no difference to this and the leave campaign is deluding people with a simplistic self-serving message.
In my experience when people and countries just think about themselves there is more conflict and we are all poorer and I believe that leaving the EU will increase the problems that we face as a country. What we need is a social and economic system that works for the benefit of all. To achieve this we have to work together. I appreciate that this is not easy. It would be nice if there was some simple answer, but there is not!