Britain remains in a widening crisis days after voters chose to leave the European Union. British Prime Minister David Cameron has announced his resignation. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is facing a coup within his own party as more than a dozen members of his shadow cabinet have resigned or been sacked. Scotland has announced it will take any steps needed to stay inside the European Union, including possibly holding a second independence referendum. Meanwhile, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is headed to Brussels and London to discuss the political and economic upheaval caused by the Brexit vote. To make sense of whatās happening, we speak to longtime British journalist Paul Mason, who has worked at the BBC and Channel 4. His new book is titled “Postcapitalism: A Guide to Our Future”
AMY GOODMAN: Britain remains in a widening crisis days after voters chose to leave the European Union in their Brexit vote. British Prime Minister David Cameron has announced his resignation. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is facing a coup within his own party as more than a dozen members of his shadow cabinet have resigned or have been sacked. On Sunday, Hilary Benn was removed as the Labour Party shadow foreign secretary.
HILARY BENN: Heās a good and decent man.
ANDREW MARR: So was it hard for you?
HILARY BENN: Heās a good and decent man, but he is not a leader. And that is the problem.
AMY GOODMAN: Opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn has rejected calls to step down as opposition leader, saying now is the time for the party to stand up for its values.
JEREMY CORBYN: Our policies on trade, economy and migration will have to change in light of the referendum vote. But that cannot be left to the likes of Johnson, Farage and Gove. Labour will fight to ensure that our agenda is at the heart of the negotiations over withdrawal from the European Union that lie ahead, including the freedom to shape our economy to work for all, maintain social and employment protections that benefit all, and that whoever leads the government is intensely held to account, to democratic account, throughout the whole process.
AMY GOODMAN: Scotland has announced it will take any steps needed to stay inside the European Union, including possibly holding a second independence referendum. On Sunday, Scotlandās First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said the country will do whatever it takes to remain in the EU. Meanwhile, Northern Irelandās deputy leader, Martin McGuinness, called Friday for a vote to unite the two sides of the Irish border.
Global stock markets have plummeted. More than $2 trillion was wiped off global equity markets on Friday in the biggest daily loss ever. Earlier today, the British pound hit a 31-year low. Meanwhile, Secretary of State John Kerry is headed to Brussels and London to discuss the political and economic upheaval caused by the Brexit vote.
To make sense of whatās happening, we go now to London, where weāre joined by longtime British economics journalist Paul Mason, who has worked at the BBC and Channel 4. His new book is titled Postcapitalism: A Guide to Our Future.
So, talk about the fallout from the Brexit vote, Paul, and also why this vote to leave the European Union ever even took place.
PAUL MASON: Well, the vote to leave the European Union took place because, repeatedly, 25 percent of British voters were, in fair electionsāthat is, the proportional representation systemāwere backing a party that wants to leave the European Union. And this impacted onto the Conservative Party, and it made it necessary for David Cameron to take a gamble of having a referendum to bury the issue for a generation, though he gambled and lost, because Cameron wanted to stay in the European Union. Fifty-two percent of British voters voted to leave. And as a result, Mr. Cameron, whoās signaled his resignation but is not yet gone, will go down in history as the Conservative leader who, first of all, destroyed the European UnionāI mean, we have left the major bloc in the world economyāand heās going to destroy the United Kingdom, as well, because, as you suggested in the introduction, Scotland will leave.
Now, the overwhelming issue behind this vote was migration. And what we had was, basically, not just the kind of people who might support Glenn Beck and kind of Donald Trump arguing that migration had gone too far, but, as it turns out, many people who are organic and core supporters of the Labour Party. The free migration from East Europe and South Europe into the United Kingdom has brought about 3 million people over the last 10 years. And in many small communities, they feelāthe people who are already here, including many black and Asian people, just said, “Itās too many.” And thereās no way of stopping it without leaving Europe. That was made very clear to them. This is what tipped the vote.
AMY GOODMAN: Paul, talk about who voted for leaving and who voted for staying. And also, the ageāwasnāt it true thatā
PAUL MASON: Yeah.
AMY GOODMAN: āmost young people voted for staying in the European Union?
PAUL MASON: Sure. Seventy-four percent of young people who voted voted to stay in the European Union. The only problem is, we think somewhere between 35 and 45 percent of that age group actually votedāmuch, much lower than any other age group. The dislocation from politics meant that the people for whom this is going to mean the most had the least say. Now, many of them on social media are really angry. They want aāthere is great support among themāpolitically, unfortunately, quite naĆÆve peopleāfor the idea that Parliament can cancel it all or that we can have a petition that cancels it all. Itās not going to be canceled. Itās happened.
Now, demographically, itāsālet me try and explain this to United States readers. If youāLondon and Scotland voted to remain. Northern Ireland, by a majority, voted to remain. What did all those places have in common? They had a narrative that explains why remaining in Europe, even despite oneās criticisms of it, was a good idea. The Scots had a left cultural nationalism. London is a buzzing multicultural city. But Northern Ireland, it was, by and large, the Catholic population which voted to stay in, because they see staying in Europe as a link to Southern Ireland, which theyāyou know, some of them would ultimately like to join. Who voted to leave was small towns. Small towns were the bedrock, small towns where the private sector provides mainly low-skill, low-wage jobs and where thereās not so much unemployment, but a high degree of sort of drabness and lackāyou know, thereās no cinemas, thereās no stores other than the basic kind of low-rent stores. And small-town Britain just attributed thisābasically, the victimhood of neoliberalism to, I think, the wrongāthe wrong course. They saw migration as the key thing that had changed in their lives in the last 10 years, and they said, because some evidence points to it at the low end of the economic scale, “Migration is hitting our wages. Itās causing stress to our public services. We canāt rent. Thereās a big shortage of rent and accommodation.” And when people like me said the real issue here is capitalism, the real issue here is neoliberalism, they would say, “Well, OK, but stopping migration still makes it better.” And ultimately, weāthe shock on the night was that some university towns, you know, some towns that are high public service employment, therefore quite high unionization, maybe 30 percent black or Asian in ethnic mix, and with a couple of universities, voted to leaveāso, Nottingham, Newport in Wales, Sheffield, where I went to university. These are kind of places like Ann Arbor, Michigan, and they still voted to leave.
AMY GOODMAN: Whatās happening to Jeremy Corbyn right now?
PAUL MASON: Right now, behind me in the Parliament, there is a revolt of his own MPs. I think he wonāt be able to face that down. And what it will lead to is another leadership election. I think this is the last thing we need. I think itās driven byāthereās quite a big middle-class hysteria since the vote. The people really are feeling, “My whole life was shaped around the European Union.” European Union is kind of the soul of the democratic and social justice story here in Britain. And many of those MPs have just lost their nerve. They say they donāt think Jeremy Corbyn can win the election. I think, for the right wing of the Labour Party, the neoliberal wing, their fear is he can win the election, because the Conservative government barely exists. There is actually no policy at the moment, behind me, from the Conservative government about what theyāre going to do about negotiations with Europe, about what theyāre going to do about the public finances. There is effectively no budget. There is effectively a chancellor whoās on borrowed time. Heās our finance minister.
So Corbyn should be in a strong position, but his own party really want to cause civil war, so weāre going to have that. I think weāll have an election in the autumn. If Corbyn survives this leadership challenge, we have a chance of having the first radical-left government in the developed world, you know, from a big country. And Iām sure, absolutely sure, that these challenges to Corbyn are being coordinated by the political representatives of big business and, you know, TTIP and free trade. You know, thatās whoās behind it. Who they put up to challenge him, weāll find out by, say, in the next 24 hours.
AMY GOODMAN: And can you talk about who could be the next prime minister?
PAUL MASON: Well, this Conservative MP, former mayor of London, Boris Johnson became the figurehead of the leave campaign. Heās come out this morning with a very emollient position. So, the leave campaign was saying, “Letās walk way from Europe and just sign a free trade deal and go global.” Today Johnson is saying, “Letās not walk away from Europe.” Heās implied they have to sign a single-market deal with Europe that would keep them within most of the European Unionās regulations. So I think heās looking like the favorite. And then, from the remainingāremain side, there is a female minister called Theresa May, who is our justice minister right now, and I think sheās going to be the one who puts up. But ultimately this is a shattered party. They just destroyed the thing that they existātheyāre called the Conservative and Unionist party, meaning they favor the United Kingdom remaining together. And as result of what they did, we will leave Europe, and Scotland will leave the U.K.
AMY GOODMAN: And talk about the effect on Northern Ireland and Ireland, whatās happening there, with Northern Ireland, like Scotland, saying no to Brexit.
PAUL MASON: Well, Northern Ireland didnāt unanimously say no. The unionist community, the Protestant community, many of them said they wanted Brexit. And the main unionist party, the Democratic Unionist Party, which is the more hardline, sectarian Protestant party, really did campaign for leaving Europe. Now, why? Because the borderāyou know, youāll know, your listeners and readers will know, that theāand viewers will know, that the border between Northern and Southern Ireland has been the subject of two civil wars, a 20-year-long civil unrest and guerrilla warfare. Now, the point is that, with the European Union, that border was being eroded. Economically, you could cross it. And, you know, people could travel without really having to go through checkpoints. And those kind of developed a kind of understanding that, you know, Northern Ireland and Southern Ireland, despite years of warfare, probably have a common, shared destiny. Now, for the Catholic population, or the anti-unionist population, many of them now want a referendum to reunite with Ireland. At the moment, thereās no party in Britain thatās going toāruling party thatās going to deliver that. But it just has left, I mean, what weāve been seeing over the weekend. And this is the interesting thing. Within the Protestant community, the kind of moreāthe kind of middle classes, theyāevery Protestant in Northern Ireland has the opportunity to apply for a Southern Irish passport. And amazingly, weāve been seeing people who have spent their entire lives committed to maintaining Northern Ireland as a separate entity within that island applying forāapplying for Southern Irish passports. In other words, weāre seeing an amazing kind of almost cultural shift among the Northern Irish population towards thinking about what their future is, once Britain, as it will, leaves the European Union.
AMY GOODMAN: On Saturday, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said he did not blame the British people for voting to leave the European Union, but rather he blamed EU leaders.
PRIME MINISTER ALEXIS TSIPRAS: [translated] The chronic deficiencies of European leadership, the insistence on extremely unjust austerity policies and knee-jerk xenophobic reflexes and anti-immigration rhetoric have been feeding populism, chauvinism and nationalism for a long time. As much as the British peopleās decision troubles and saddens us, we must consider it a completely respectable decision, one that confirms there is a crisis of identity in Europe, a strategic crisis.
AMY GOODMAN: Thatās Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras. Paul Mason, your response?
PAUL MASON: Well, I think heās essentially right. What we should say, first of all, is that 52 percent people who voted to leave the EU, not all of them are racist and xenophobes. They had legitimate economic concerns, and many of them, like me, had severe criticisms of the European Unionās action over Greece. This drove both a kind of left- and a right-wing response to Europe, which I tried to stop. I thought it would be a bad idea to leave now, but most people, 52 percent of people, said they want to leave. Now, Tsipras is right that this is essentially a crisis of European neoliberalism. We have governments in the center of EuropeāGermany, France, Italyācommitted to austerity, even as their own economy goes down the tubes. The Lisbon Treaty, which is the founding treaty of the European Union, mandates that they have to do the opposite of what, say, Janet Yellen has done or what Democratic treasury secretaries under Obama did, which is expand the economy. In a crisis, theyāre mandated to shrink the economy. This is killing the EuropeāI mean, in other words, the European Union is killing the ideal of Europe. And Tsipras is right to worry about the right-wing backlash.
But even more urgent now for us is that what this is going to doāI mean, look, the marketās response today, wiping $2 trillion off shares worldwide, is not about Britain. Itās about what happens to the European Union. If we now see wave after wave of demands for other referendums and other countries beginning to leaveāGreece should be the last one to leave, actually, but others might. And at that point, this 500 million-strong economic bloc, which is supposed to function and be one of the keystones, the capstone even, of the global world economic system, is disintegrating. And only that European Union stands behind the banking system. If the European Union breaks up into separate nations, then each of them will have to stand behind their own banking system, and their own banking system is already half-collapsed. Thatās what is frightening the markets.
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