One week left - come what may, how Labour Remainers go forward


There’s a week to go until the EU referendum. I suspect like everyone by now, I can’t wait for it to be over, so roll on next Thursday.

Moreover, like many Remainers, my nerves are also in overdrive as I watch the polls and hear discomforting anecdotes. But I knew this would never be easy. In 2013 when I blogged in support of a referendum, I wrote that “it will be a very difficult fight, but on balance, I’d ever so slightly rather be the ‘in’ campaign than the ‘outs’ when it comes down to it” - I still stand by that.

Better Together went through a late wobble much like the one Stronger In is experiencing now, but achieved a hard-fought win in the end (though we must learn the lessons about the aftermath this time). The pollsters are heavily caveating some of the Leave leads. While I accept that a pragmatic late break for the continuity option may not be an immutable law, history is on our side, as Peter Kellner has noted. Expected high turnout is a good signal for Remain. The economic warnings have been consistently stated and are being borne out by the markets, and in an age of all-round scepticism of politicians, some polling suggests expert voices like Mark Carney may carry the most weight, as Stronger In has often seemed to calculate. And lastly, a narrative of Brexit becoming a real possibility also helps Remain – it gives young or complacent would-be Remainers a kick up the arse to get the polls and obligates undecideds to take full account of the gravity of the decision, rather than casting a risk-free protest vote as they might do if Remain felt favoured. Leave are peaking too soon.

There’s all to play for, so if you’re nervous get out there and keep/start campaigning (look up local events for Labour In here, or Stronger In here). But when all is said and done, here is what I think Labour Remainers need to do.

1.     Regardless of the result – unite and fight

First of all, renewed Labour unity against the Tories is both necessary and possible in either outcome.

As I said in February, I’d like to see Labour In and Labour Leave figures come together on June 24th to congratulate each other on a principled campaign and go forward together. Working-class Leaver MPs like John Mann should be elevated to more visible positions, ideally including the shadow cabinet if a post-referendum reshuffle goes ahead. As James Hallwood wrote this week, diversity is strength and the party’s few prominent Eurosceptic voices should be seen as ambassadors both to and for the many, many underrepresented Leavers (and grudging Remainers) in our core vote.

Unity will also stand us in a nice contrast to the anarchy that will grip the Tory party pretty much regardless of the outcome (light-hearted suggestion: invite the press to join Alan Johnson and Gisela Stuart as they eat popcorn and watch the blue-on-blue outbreaks roll in on BBC News 24, if it doesn’t belabour the point too much). After failing to exploit Osborne and IDS’ impromptu production of Omnishambles Budget 2: Electric Boogaloo back in March, this could also give Jeremy Corbyn a second (and likely final) chance to prove he can move in and making himself look like a credible, stabilising alternative PM. Then or never – there won’t be a better opportunity.

And as Stephen Bush noted, it’s also true that this referendum has almost made David Cameron and immediate allies seem like temporary inhabitants of the British left at times. This has generated plenty of quotes Labour can use to advantage once normal service resumes. John Major attacked Boris Johnson for backing NHS charges and said the NHS “is about as safe with [him and Michael Gove] as a pet hamster would be with a hungry python”. When Sadiq Khan agreed to join with David Cameron in the national interest, he had to call Sadiq a “proud Muslim” mere weeks after smearing him as a friend of extremists. Osborne has admitted raising income tax can increase receipts, contrary to his usual assertions. They’ve cited facts about migrants they might sometimes shy from – there must be other small examples such as this across a range of policy areas. And the biggest came on Sunday, when Cameron came as close he ever will to admitting that the Tory narrative about the 2008 crash has been dishonest (“the 2008 recession was the worst since the war, and if we vote [Leave], this will be the first recession that was self-inflicted”, he said). Labour use these against the Tories to reinforce our messages.

2.     If it’s Remain

If it’s a win, I look forward to being able to breathe a sigh of relief and have a celebratory drink or five. But a reminder – it can’t stop there.

The point about Labour Leavers being put up front will be vital here. A large minority of our vote – especially working-class Labour voters – will have broken with the party and potentially feel betrayed. We don’t want UKIP to become in England what the SNP are now in Scotland.

We will also need to take a leaf out of Sadiq’s book. When he won, commentators noted how swiftly he moved to prevent Corbynites from “colonising his victory”, instead making clear what he felt his own mandate did and didn’t mean for Labour. Similarly, one voter told me he was voting Leave because he thought Brussels would claim a UK Remain vote as a mandate for the status quo (or even further integration). He’ll be far from alone and the thought of that aggravates me as much as anyone. A few weeks back I finished a Friday evening Labour In canvassing session, only to see a story about some asinine remarks Jean-Claude Juncker had just made (it brought to mind a fridge magnet my parents had that said “cleaning a house when kids are growing is like shovelling snow when it’s still snowing” - cue angry Tweeting from me). Martin Shulz, Donald Tusk and others have made similarly unhelpful comments. If we win, it will be a close-fought and self-made victory for Britain’s own economic, social and national interest, and one achieved firmly in spite of them and the EU’s dysfunction. Shy of half the country will still have voted Leave and will need to hear that reassurance, but those voting or campaigning for Remain will owe it to ourselves as well.

Instead, our leaders will need to share their battle scars with colleagues on the continent and let them know just how bloody hard this referendum was. How for all the EU’s benefits on paper, it was still incredibly difficult to defend in its current state to a fair-minded but frustrated electorate. How this referendum has exposed deep divisions in our society and most established political parties, ones that plenty of other EU national leaders will be acutely aware exist in their own countries too. A warning shot and a cautionary tale, not an excuse for complacency.

We’ll then have to parlay that into real reform. I’m open-minded on how best to address immigration, but if Ed Balls et al do want to push for a rethink on free movement, right after a razor-thin Remain vote (not 10 days before) might be the best moment to try. Alternatively, a ‘migration dividend’ for areas where public services are most strained and language training to promote integration are needed at home, and we could lobby for EU funding for the purpose. Get going on that ‘red card’ veto and those growth-focused reforms. Press for Gordon Brown’s ‘leading not leaving’ pledges for 500,000 new jobs, worker protections and action on tax avoidance (and pressure the Tories at home to sign up, then make them stymying our vision of EU reform a 2020 general election issue if/when they don’t). Find a way to involve the public in the selection of our EU commissioner.

A blog by Douglas Dowell highlighted numerous ways we could strengthen accountability and UK influence, some of which could be done under our own volition (term limits for our MEPs and an EU committee in Westminster to set mandates for UK representatives like the Danes and Finns have domestically, he suggests), while others will require long-term coalition building in Brussels of the kind Cameron opted against until his slapdash renegotiation. Jonathan Lindsell wrote up some ideas to ease national reconciliation around immigration, TTIP, tax dodging and the need for Britain to creatively defy the spirit - or even letter - of EU law more often (as Germany and others do). He also notes that with the EU democratically affirmed as part of our governance arrangements, real scrutiny from the media and concerned citizens will need to be brought to bear on how we are represented day-to-day in Brussels (unlikely Europhile Jeremy Clarkson rightly observed the striking difference with how we cover Westminster, where “an MP cannot even put a cup of coffee on expenses without being torn to pieces”).

Lastly, all parties should spend the next three years laying the groundwork for the 2019 European elections to be a real competition over effective representation, rather than the usual proxy vote for general frustrations. Labour has ground to make up here – we can’t exactly blame people for not voting on European issues when in the 2014 Euros, not one of our Party Election Broadcasts even mentioned the word “Europe”. Brown’s ‘leading not leaving’ prospectus and the impetus for reform could provide a theme to campaign on this time. We can take the Tories to task for spurning allies in order to appease their internal divisions, rather than fighting every inch for UK influence. And it is vital to our national interest that UKIP be sternly challenged this time. If a company’s employees didn’t feel it should exist and only clocked in to get their payslips, you wouldn’t expect it to operate very efficiently – such is the daily contradiction of UKIP now providing the largest contingent of Britain’s MEPs. They don’t want the EU to work, whereas a public who voted Remain by definition will – that case could be easier to make than before, if we’re willing to try.

The Scots were promised that “no” didn’t mean “no change” in their referendum, but many there feel the political class betrayed them. If it’s Remain, for real this time, it can’t mean “remain the same”. There’ll be no point in securing victory only to waste it.

3.     If it’s Leave

Okay I’m going to cop out a bit here. The most immediate concern would be restraint and respect – accepting the public’s will and making the best of a bad situation, not scorning half our own country or retreating into the denialism and false consciousness tropes that all too humanly grabbed many Labourites in 2015. But I’m not going to do this today. Cross that bridge if we happen to come to it, but this bank of the river is better for all and we can stay here. Get out there and campaign!

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