Northern Ireland's Problem Lives in London. Ask Fintan.
Irish Times columnist, Fintan O'Toole, has a word for the "made in Whitehall" mess that plagues Northern Ireland - "Brexternity." It's the wound that will not heal inflicted on the North by Boris Johnson's blind haste to declare Brexit victory.
Ask a stupid question and you get a stupid answer. The Northern Ireland protocol is a stupid answer: it imposes a complex bureaucracy on the movement of ordinary goods across the Irish Sea. But it is the only possible response to a problem created by Boris Johnson. The reason it keeps coming around again and again, like a ghoul on a ghost train, is that it requires Johnson and his government to do something that goes against the grain of the whole Brexit project: to acknowledge that choices have costs.The question is: why did you divide one part of the UK from the rest, creating a chimerical country in which most of the body is outside the EU’s single market while one foot is still inside? Since it is unanswerable, we get the embarrassing stunt: the demand that the EU should tear up a crucial part of the Brexit withdrawal agreement – or else.
Or else what? Britain will unilaterally suspend the operation of the protocol, force-feed the people of Northern Ireland with good English sausage, trigger retaliatory trade sanctions from the EU, destroy Britain’s reputation as a trustworthy partner for any sane country and deeply antagonise the Biden administration in Washington with whom it is hoping to do a landmark trade deal. Good luck with all that.
...When this problem is dissected, the message written on its heart will be: Boris Johnson is constitutionally incapable of accepting the relationship between cause and effect.
The protocol itself may be complicated, both in its dense technocratic language and in its practical operation. But behind it lies a stark and simple reality. Johnson and the rest of the Brexiters had a choice to make. They could cut the UK off from the EU’s single market and customs union. Or they could prioritise the integrity of the UK itself.
They could not do both – and they still can’t. The dreary soap opera of the protocol is driven by their need to wish away this unpleasant fact. You can’t bake your “oven-ready” Brexit deal and then remove one of the main ingredients from the final dish. The EU has far better things to be doing than making a return trip to the hellish tedium of Brexternity. But for Frost and Johnson, impossible is nothing. Performative belligerence is not bounded by the limits of what can be achieved. Its main function, indeed, is the denial of reality.
It is worth recalling how quickly and nonchalantly Johnson made this choice. He did it in 90 minutes, during a meeting with the then taoiseach, Leo Varadkar, in the Wirral in October 2019. He grasped it as a lifeline to save himself – without that deal, his prime ministership might have been the shortest on record.
The choices, in this pitiful pleading, were never really made at all. They have vanished. But the same, alas, cannot be said for the consequences – especially for the people of Northern Ireland. They have to live with effects that, in Johnson’s retelling of the story, were accidental and unintended. The three-word slogan of Brexit has been replaced by a four-letter word: oops.
Boris Johnson's appetite for illogic and internal contradiction rivals that of a slave state Republican Congressman. He created this mess, he insisted on it and now he wants the EU to make everything right.
At one point Johnson let slip that he was ready to sacrifice Northern Ireland to save Brexit. He may have to do that or risk re-igniting The Troubles.
Looking forward to a single Ireland, north to south and an independent Scotland.
ReplyDeleteFunny how two fractious modern political entities, with more divisions than their peers both have formal names that start with the word 'United'.
It's becoming almost inevitable that the Republic and Northern Ireland will have to reunite. As you point out, unity does seem to be waning these days. A sign of our times?
DeleteThe English have always treated the Irish with scorn, sort of sub human.
ReplyDeleteEven the English are not united as the economy centralizes to the city of London financial district and even that sector is scared to death of the effects of crypto currencies.
Tough days ahead for the Brits with their bought and payed for spineless MP,s.
TB
"Tough days ahead" could be the cry of the 2020s, TB
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