- On March 12, the British Parliament overwhelmingly rejected – for a second time – a Brexit plan worked out by Prime Minister Theresa May.
- A day later, the lawmakers voted against a “hard Brexit” – one without any approved plan.
- Then, on March 14, British lawmakers voted 412 to 202 to delay an exit from the European Union, which had been planned for March 29. They also voted not to call a second referendum to allow the British people to accept or reject Prime Minister May’s Brexit plan.
Three experts on the European Union consider the lasting effects of the delay and uncertainty.
A damaging spectacle
Garret Martin, American University, School of International Service
Another week of drama at the Palace of Westminster, host of the United Kingdom’s two houses of Parliament. The last three days witnessed a flurry of Brexit activities. Parliament scheduled multiple votes, debates, amendments. Factions inside Westminster jockeyed for control and Ministers resigned. And Prime Minister Theresa May literally lost her voice.
With the dust now settled, this much is clear. Members of Parliament, from across the major parties, still greatly dislike the withdrawal deal from the EU negotiated by Theresa May.
These same MPs also reject the option of crashing out of the EU without a deal. And they overwhelmingly supported requesting a delay for Brexit to happen, beyond the planned exit date of March 29, 2019. Such an extension, and its precise length, would still require the unanimous agreement of the 27 remaining states of the EU, which are scheduled to meet on March 21 and 22.
In other words, no one knows when the Brexit saga will end.
There’s no denying that Brexit, with its intrigue and uncertainty, is compelling viewing. Political junkies may think of it as Game of Thrones without the dragons and violence. That day-to-day focus can, however, easily obscure the fact that Brexit has been a complete calamity, one for which the UK is already paying high costs, and will continue to do so.
First, the spectacle of Parliament repeatedly failing to agree on a deal has greatly tarnished the reputation of the UK as a well-managed country. It is now 994 days and counting since the referendum in June 2016, with no clear end in sight.
Second, the endless bickering in Parliament and inability to compromise is fuelling a deep disenchantment with politics. More than two-thirds of the public in the UK does not feel represented by current political parties.
And third, the prolonged Brexit negotiations are only further polarising an already very divided British society.
Like all good shows, Brexit will eventually come to an end. But its legacy will be felt for years to come.
The Brexit unicorn has damaged British democracy
Scott L. Greer and Holly Jarman, University of Michigan
In the two years since it took place, it’s become clear that the Brexit referendum campaign was a gross failure of democratic politics.
The campaign was suffused with campaign finance illegalities and foreign interference. But it was also a debate in which every key term was undefined. No one who voted in the referendum could be certain what Brexit would look like.
Here’s a comparison. When Scots were asked to vote on independence from Britain in 2014, the Scottish government offered them a 649-page policy document on everything from post-independence fisheries management to the status of the queen.
But when British voters were invited to vote on Brexit, they were offered nowhere near as much information. There was no specification of what leaving would mean, how it would work or what the costs might be. Into the vacuum of information rushed misperception and lies.
Brexit remains ill-defined because it promised the impossible – a mythical unicorn of sovereignty, wealth, national greatness and reduced immigration. Such a package is attractive, but unavailable to a country of the UK’s size, position and wealth.
There is no form of Brexit, for example, that can improve the National Health Service, as we and co-authors showed in a recent article. But many voters supported Brexit in the belief, encouraged by the Leave campaign, that Brexit would mean more money for publicly funded health care.
Competing demands from different groups to deliver the impossible have damaged the U.K.’s political system. That’s because, for many politicians, the politics of Brexit are now about avoiding the blame for the consequences of a damaging decision.
The problem with the politics of casting and avoiding blame is that finger-pointing and dodging finger-pointing can get in the way of solving problems. Brexit is a clear case of that.
The politics of the UK are now focused not on managing or fixing problems, but on blaming others for them. The focus on blaming others for divisive and dangerous Brexit policies will scar Britain for decades, since the politics of disunity and blame will live long after 2019.
Scott L. Greer, Professor, Global Health Management and Policy and Political Science, University of Michigan; Garret Martin, Professorial Lecturer, American University School of International Service and Holly Jarman, John G. Searle Assistant Professor, University of Michigan.
This article first appeared on The Conversation.