
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
Compromise, wrote Edmund Burke, is not only the foundation of all government but also every human benefit, enjoyment and virtue. But what did he know about politics – this is Brexit Britain
and only total victory, it seems, will do. True, a few hardy souls in the Conservative leadership scramble are attempting to keep Edmund’s flame alive by advancing a negotiated Brexit
settlement. But with Brussels now setting its face against further negotiations or extensions, the stage looks set for an almighty game of Tory brinkmanship in the autumn. Indeed,
extraordinarily the most important question in Westminster right now is not the identity of this country’s next Prime Minister. It is whether vociferously anti no-deal Tories such as the
Chancellor Philip Hammond are really prepared to crash a ‘clean Brexit’ government at the almost certain cost of their own political careers. If Hammond and his ilk blink, no deal it will
be. If not, then the Conservative Party will surely split irrevocably, and Britain will have its first revolutionary socialist PM. One would have thought proximity to such a precipice might
bring liberal Britain out in cold sweats. Alas, not a bit of it. For you see everything in political Remainia must now be subsumed to the quest for the cherished, Brexit-vanquishing second
referendum. Other campaigning goals must be temporarily suspended, every event assessed by its ability to assist the Remainer revolt. So, this logic continues, why not bring on a hard Brexit
Prime Minister? After all, will this not accelerate a crisis from which a new plebiscite might emerge? Such scorched earth tactics have long been the strategic gambit of elite Remainers:
the real enemies are those who might yet strike a deal. That this, almost by definition, also increases the political strength of no deal is fully priced in and it is beginning to look like
they will get their roulette referendum. It is hard to see a Burkean winning the Tory candidacy and equally hard to see Parliament acquiescing to no deal. At this point, with the polls
surely warning the Government away from a general election, a referendum emerges as the ‘compromise’ option. You could call it the non-compromisers’ compromise. No deal versus Remain. Double
or quits. Make no mistake: in liberal Remain-land this moment will be celebrated deliriously. Well, not by this remainer. Indeed, I increasingly feel like a stranger in my own tribe for the
simple fact I cannot understand what would be so calamitous about leaving the EU with a deal. Yes, Brexit could mean an awful lot of bad things for Britain, but the crucial word in that
sentence is could. Because nearly everything about Brexit, even very big questions it raises such as the future status of migrants, can be settled and then unsettled by the usual back and
forth of future Westminster elections. The only exception to this is trade – Brexit, by definition, must make our access to European markets poorer. This is bad, certainly, but worth the
poisonous division that might follow a remain victory? Worth playing chicken with the genuine economic damage a no deal Brexit might unleash? No, for me prosecuting a culture war over a
trading relationship will never be anything other than absurd. Moreover, it is precisely this peculiar monomania that my political family used to deride in committed Eurosceptics. It is not
too late to avert this catastrophe. The numbers may be there in Parliament for the deal if Remainers (on the Labour side especially) broke for compromise. But sadly, rather than the Burkeans
we need, Brexit has made Bill Cash’s out of us all.