Ten years on, we’re living with the ghosts of Brexit. Reform and Restore know that – the rest are playing catch-up
What story does Britain tell itself about Brexit, 10 years after the vote that transformed the country? Watch TV or read the papers and you find one of two viewpoints: from the common room or the conference room.
The common room story is about chums and how they fall out. Friendships forged on hallowed playing fields and over Cotswold kitchen suppers, then dashed on the rocks of ambition. The new BBC documentary Brexit: A Very British Civil War is the latest in the genre, recounting what Dave said to Boris said to Michael said to Dom. It oohs at the deals struck over sets of tennis, and aahs at the then prime minister threatening dissenters with: “I will fuck you up for ever.” This is David Cameron as box office: the Scarface of the Bullingdon Club. And Brexit, you understand, was simply an Oxford fracas that got out of hand.
Over in the conference room, the suits bemoan the damage to GDP and whether one day the European club might let us back in. Brexit, you see, is about trade and contracts.
Entirely missing from either story is the streets. Those rainy streets outside polling stations where on 23 June 2016 people queued up, many of them for the first time in years. The slim majority opting to leave did so not necessarily because they cared much about the EU, but as part of a giant vote against the establishment. For months the government, the opposition, the Treasury’s Project Fear department, the Bank of England, the Confederation of British Industry, the Trades Union Congress and individual employers said Britain would be Stronger In – and........
