For all that
there were an awful lot of references and call-backs to the Independence
Referendum a couple of years ago, this European Referendum campaign was no
Indyref. Sure we had encores for the old
favourites – “Project Fear”, “Pooling & Sharing”, “Best of Both Worlds”,
“Talking Down Britain/Scotland”, “Scaremongering” as well as a reprise of the Winton
Paradox. However, all of the EU campaign
has been a fourth rate attempt at a copy of the Independence Referendum. As the title of this blog suggests, this
campaign has been the worst campaign in living memory.
Cameron with EU President Jean Claude Junker, 18 February 2016 |
As I’ve pointed
out previously, there are better reasons than Immigration to vote to leave the
EU. It does seem that the official leave
campaign have picked up on this on the latter stages of the campaign – hence the
consistent repeating of the phrase “take back control” from the ITV debate two weeks ago
onwards. However Immigration still
dominates the Leave campaign and has contributed to the divisive climate. That immigration is seen by the leave side as
their trump card possibly says something about the official Remain side.
The pro-Brexit
campaign has also contributed to the poor quality of the debate. Their trump card of the economic case has not
been played properly – with the government swamping the public with figures and
statistics rather than picking out killer facts and using them on repeat. The remainers have not responded very well
either to the immigration card being played, with rather than a rebuttal of the
Leave case with the case for freedom of movement, acknowledgement from the
Westminster parties that ‘something must be done’ about rising immigration.
The only voices
on the remain side in favour of both immigration and freedom of movement have
been the SNP, and even then they have been demonising the voices of anti
immigration rather than understanding why anti immigration rhetoric has been
playing well in the North of England and in former strong Labour supporting
parts of the country. Given my own
history with the blog, it is surprising that the 'Labour Hame' blog has by far
the best Scottish piece on the immigration debate – Cat Headley’s piece called
for a smart campaign for immigration. Certainly
it is a contribution better than the complacent and increasingly pious campaign
interventions from the SNP.
It’s not just on
immigration that the pro-EU campaign has failed. The positive case for the EU has been smothered
in a blizzard of figures and statistics, some of which are highly
subjective. There is also Cameron’s
reliance on negative campaigning, which some political observers claim has won
him a referendum and an election already.
It remains to be seen whether with this campaign will be won with
Cameron’s brand of ‘encouraging’ voters to hold onto nurse in fear of what’s
worse. However Cameron’s previous record
is actually quite chequered once you get past the results.
True, part of the
reason Cameron won last year was the constantly mentioned prospect of a
possible coalition between Labour & the SNP. But the reason it worked so spectacularly was
Labour’s own botched rebuttal. With the
independence referendum however, negative campaigning most certainly did not
win that referendum. At the launches of
Better Together and Yes Scotland in Summer 2012, support of remaining within
the UK was at 68% in the polls. The
consensus was that this would be a cakewalk, particularly with the stumbling
scratchy start by Yes Scotland. The game
changer that saw the polls dramatically narrow was not the much vaunted SNP
White Paper, but Osborne’s notorious ‘Sermon on The Pound’ (© Iain McWhirter)
speech, which attempted to torpedo the SNP’s terrible plan to adopt the English
Pound as the currency for an Independent Scotland (as opposed to adopting the
Scottish Pound, Sterlingization if you will – which is technically what we
already have).
From that moment,
the polls narrowed until the moment which really saved the UK. Not an act of negative campaigning, but the
now notorious Daily Record front page – The Vow. That kept enough soft ‘no’s’ from wavering
and defecting to ‘Yes’ to win the day for the pro-Union Better Together. But a winning vote of 55.3% revealed the
ground that Project Fear had allowed to be conceded. If conceding 26% to your opponents is a sign
of success, then success itself has been redefined in the new politics. In comparison to Cameron & Osborne’s bombastic
style and scaremongering, Corbyn has been a quiet but dignified figure.
If the experience
of 2014 is anything to go by, the fallout of this referendum will last long and
be fractious. That years referendum,
which most people think of as a joyous celebration of politics saw a fractious
and bitter conclusion followed by a more fractions and bitter fallout. This doesn’t bode well for a campaign which
has poisoned the wells of British (English?) politics from the start. The only good news is that the campaign is
now over. The bad news is that the
results are still to come, followed very swiftly by the fallout.
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