Blaming immigrants is the oldest right-wing game in history says
Former Europe Minister.
Denis MacShane is a former journalist and MP. He was the youngest
president of the NUJ in 1979 and went into exile when Margaret Thatcher was
elected to work for the international trade union movements helping the
Solidarity union in Poland, black trade unions in South Africa, Lula’s
metalworkers in Brazil and the unions whose general strike in South Korea
toppled the military dictatorship in 1987. He is unusal amongst British
political activists in speaking European languages.
While an MP he was Minister of state for Europe. An active campaigner against
antj-semitism while in Parliament, the former Rotherham MP who left the Common
in 2012 was once chair of an anti-Semitism think tank called The European institute for the study of contemporary Antisemitism. He wrote a book Globalising Hatred: the New
Antisemitism in 2008. The BNP targeted him for attacks because of a chapter exposing
its leader anti-semitic record. Since leaving office Dr MacShane is working
“pretty much all the time on Brexit”. He says he writes or speaks on Brexit
almost every day and has spoken on the subject all over the world from
Washington to Tel Aviv. In January 2015 he published his book Brexit: How
Britain Will Leave Europe, which predicted the outcome of the June 2016
referendum. He has written a new book on what happens next, which will be
published in June 2017, on the anniversary of the referendum.
As a respected authority on the EU and Brexit, MacShane is well
placed to answer the questions I put to him;
Was immigration the biggest factor in the Brexit vote? I
asked.
“Yes. The focus of the anti-Europeans was on the number of European
workers in the UK. The slogan “taking back control’ was direct from the UKIP
line that the UK and to “take back control’ of its frontiers. At the Tory Party
conference in October 2015, Theresa May, then the Home Secretary said “The
number of immigrants coming in from Europe is unsustainable’ to thunderous
applause. Staring with William Hague in 2001, then Michael Howard in 2005 and
David Cameron in 2010, the Conservatives took the old language of Enoch Powell
and updated it against European who came to work in the UK. There were some who
genuinely did not like the EU and saw the problem as one of sovereignty but the
dominant issue in every meeting and on every doorstep or in every radio
phone-in was immigration”.
I asked if the referendum result had led to genuine rise in race
related hate crimes or if the reports were being exaggerated? He told me “The
police have stated quite clearly that the up to 100 per cent rise in hate crimes
have clearly linked these attacks to the xenophobic attacks on the presence of
Europeans in the UK which was at the core of the Brexit campaign. The Community
Security Trust which reports on anti-Semitic attacks in the UK has also noted a
major increase in anti-Jewish attacks since the referendum campaign with its
focus on xenophobic themes”.
But did the electorate really understand the consequences when they
voted to leave the EU and did they think that the cost (yet to be seen) a price
worth paying or were they mislead into voting for something different to what
they will end up with? Not according to Macshane, he says “the plebiscite it is now widely
acknowledged was won on the biggest lies ever seen in a national vote - that
£350 million a week would be available for the NHS, that 75 million Turks were
about to arrive, that the Queen’s Speech was mainly written in Brussels or that
a European Army was about to be formed. There was no effective discussion on the
costs because we will not now these until the middle 2020s. The referendum was
lost 15-20 years ago when a well-funded political campaign was launched with
support from the Conservative leadership - forget UKIP – and powerful off-shore
owned media networks to rubbish the EU and create the climate which made Brexit
inevitable”.
The Labour party recently managed to hold on to Stoke on Trent in a
bi-election, where UKIP’s new leader Paul Nuttall was a candidate. I asked the
former member of Tony Blair’s cabinet if the victory signalled a change of heart
and the beginning of the end for UKIP. He told me “Ukip is finished in March 2019 assuming that a political Brexit is
unavoidable and the UK will elect no more MEPs to the European Parliament. UKIP
is a one pony party. It has no programme for national or local government. It is
simply an anti-European party with two linked demands - to win a plebiscite and
to use it to amputate the UK from Europe. David Cameron conceded the former and
UKIP fellow travellers like Boris Johnson, Liam Fox, David Davis and Michael
Gove are hoping deliver the latter”.
Are we yet to see the consequences touted before Brexit around the
stock markets crashing and the pound falling or were the claims just scare
mongering?
Dr MacShane says “We have not left the EU so Brexit has not happened
and the economic impact will not be known until the middle 2020s. But the
announcements about moving work to Europe to guarantee access to the Single
Market are not scare-mongering but cold reality. The Brexit devaluation is
feeding into higher prices and inflation and the Government has had to abandon
its economic programmes to increase debt and deficits to keep the economy
afloat. Brexit is causing uncertainty in all sectors of economic activity and
above all in FDI which only comes to the UK on the promise that any firm
investing in Britain would have full, unfettered access to 450 million middle
class consumers in Europe. Brexit breaks that promise”.
If UKIP are finished, I asked Can Labour win back the voters from
UKIP or are they likely to go to other parties such as Conservative or more far
right groups?
“Labour won back voters tempted by anti-immigration populism from
Enoch Powell and Margaret Thatcher. Labour needs a convincing offer for many who
feel with justification they are losers in the modern economy. Blaming
immigrants is the oldest right-wing game in history - Jews in the 1930s, West
Indians in the 1950s, Indians and Pakistanis in the 1970s and 1980s, Kosovan and
asylum seekers in the 1990s, Poles, Slovaks, and other citizens of new EU member
states in the last 15 years. When Labour has convincing policies and convincing
spokespersons it will start to do well again!”
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