European
Union Referendum, 23rd June 2016 – Final Result
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Leave the EU
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17,410,742
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51.9%
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Remain within the EU
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16,141,241
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48.1%
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About twenty to
five this morning, the news networks in this country projected a win for the
vote leave side in this referendum. It
is a vote, finally confirmed at 6am but was highly likely from the slight pro
EU declaration of Newcastle at midnight followed quickly by the thumping Exit
win in Sunderland that will have massive implications for the UK, for Scotland
and for the EU with the Prime Minister already signalling his intention to
resign.
For the EU, this
pulls the rug from under them. They
simply did not see this coming. Both
their standing and also their self importance will have taken a huge knock. For the UK, the short to medium term shocks
will be nothing compared to the less gently unravelling of the United Kingdom. Sinn Fein have already called for a
referendum on a united Ireland, while the SNP are looking out the rulebooks and
slide charts to see if Indyref 2 will be more winnable than the first
Indyref. On a 62% pro EU vote in
Scotland, convincing people that a second Independence referendum so soon after
the first may not be the given deal that many pro independence supporters
believe it to be. Still, if the SNP
think they can win from this current position, good luck.
The Pound Shop Mosley claims victory at 4am this morning |
All of that is
yet to come, all following the inevitable financial meltdown. What has already begun is the post
mortem. Labour types in London have
already started by laying the blame firmly at the door of the SNP. True, I’ve not seen a piece of election
literature – the official government booklet excepted – and I did not see the
same level of street engagement as there was either during the General Election
or the Holyrood Election. However you
cannot blame the SNP for this. It was a
more positive, if heavily spun & gradually more pious, case for the EU than
the case that was being prosecuted by our southern cousins. They were the only party to make the case for
immigration/freedom of movement. That in
itself is a big big reason for the vote to exit.
I had always said
that the key to elections is the economic debate. In this case, the Anglocentric-Remainers
completely and utterly lost the argument.
Cameron & Osborne pursued Project Fear redux in terms of the
economic argument putting out figures which may or may not be accurate and
publishing forecasts and not caveating them.
As I’d pointed out earlier, Project Fear conceded 26% over the course of
the 2 and a half years of the Independence referendum, why would anyone think
that it would work again for this referendum.
For people who voted for Brexit, immigration was always a symptom of a
bigger malase, that the Thatcher and Blair years had left them behind and that
immigration became the handiest stick to beat the Westminster establishment
with. Sure we can all be disgusted at
the campaign that UKIP & Farage ran (and the official Leave campaign
switched to about the time purdah began) but to blame those voters misses the
point. The failure lies with the main
parties at Westminster, the same ones who shrugged off 1.6 million people
voting to leave the United Kingdom 20 odd months ago and failed to build
bridges with pro Independence voters.
The big irony
here of course is that the Prime Minister was a much more visible presence
during this campaign than he was during the Independence Referendum. His appearances on debates though were generally
considered to be poor and he mostly came second best to his ‘Leave’ opponents. Is it any wonder then that Cameron has
decided to resign. Next up for public
scrutiny will be the chancellor George Osborne.
The currency of Osborne was already crashing in current Sterling
fashion, it will be more through the floor as the perceived wisdom that Osborne
was the heir apparent to Cameron now looks dead in the water. In truth, Cameron had led a charmed
life. Unable to secure a commons
majority against the party that caused the UK leg of the recession/credit
crunch in 2010, secured the immediate future of the UK in 2014 in spite of his…
minimum campaigning style and secured a small working majority last year in no
small thanks to the heavy legged style of Labour. Cameron’s luck has simply run out and he knew
it.
While I had my
own reasons for voting for Brexit, reasons to do with democratic accountability
and transparency, the UK as a whole voted for exit for reasons that could and
should have been easily rebutted and comprehensively dismantled. Immigration/Freedom of movement should have
been taken out as an argument straight away.
The economy should have been a much more concise argument and the pro-EU
argument should have been clearer on what we should have been voting for. And, yes, the EU should have seen the warning
signs from the 2014 European Elections and looked at ways of making the EU more
democratic and transparent. But then again, the EU’s way has always been to
fudge & fix their way out of trouble.
When Maastricht was in trouble, both Denmark and France were told to
replay their referendums, similarly with Ireland when they voted against the Amsterdam
and Lisbon treaties. And that’s before
we get to the extremely secretive TTIP negotiations. The official Leave campaign, in short, did
not conduct a smart, astute campaign and relied on negative campaigning.
If Cameron’s luck
has run out, what do we make of the state of Labour. Their previous heartlands in England &
Wales voted en masse for Brexit. I’m not
sure you can blame Corbyn for this, as a lot of this looks like dissatisfaction
with and a hangover from Labour party policy from… oh… when they were in power. Where you can
maybe blame Corbyn is his lack of communication skills, but you can certainly
blame the Labour right for their inability to connect to the former blue collar
constituency.
The worst
campaign in political history has given us a result that is resolutely not the
best of both worlds. The plummeting value
of Sterling appears to be the start of a political earthquake that has already
claimed the Prime Minister. The
shockwaves from this decision will travel far and wide. Once the dust settles,
I do not expect Cameron to be the only political casualty of this vote and I
expect the political landscape to be dramatically altered for all parties.
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