Brexit and National Humiliation

In short, this process May has been repeatedly humiliated by her party, their media, by parliament, and by the EU itself. Yet for all the blows she's taken, she was able to dole out a few jabs of shame in the ERG's direction. They've been made to look like mugs, and they know it. Some have felt chastened and come back to "mummy" - like Shrewsbury's Daniel Kawczynski, and others hold their no deal fetish in a death grip and refusing to deal with realities. Good. May the next Tory leader come from this unrepresentative rump of hard right chumpery.
Unrepresentative, yes, but not without a following. There are still a few hundred thousand people who read the Express, the press home of no deal since The Mail went woke. This disgusting rag has tried to keep the pecker of its falling circulation up with the viagra of more racism, more hysteria. If this was aimed at young men Prevent would be all over it like a rash. What it is doing is stirring up not just hate, but betrayal myths, stoking the utterly stupid and reckless notion that everyone apart from Mogg and his mates, UKIP, Farage, and Tommeh are stabbing the nation in the back. Where have we heard that before?
Assuming the EU grants the UK an extension which, at the time of writing, looks like it will be up to a year, the process is primed with opportunities to peddle a humiliation narrative. If we're looking at March 2020, the UK is set to be "supervised" at three monthly intervals to check how the process of coming up with a deal acceptable to Westminster. For the likes of the Express, this is fine for basket cases like Greece but definitely not us because, well, Britain. Under May's deal, assuming the impossible for a moment and that it comes back, we have no say over the custom's relationship in the backstop, and so another occasion for humiliation. Because the UK, in the backstop (or for that matter, no deal) would have to negotiate a trade deal from a position of weakness, more humiliation. And if we do arrive at a deal but we overrun the transition period because we can't arrive at a trade deal with the EU, the UK has to pay the EU £1bn/month to stay in that relationship until a new arrangement is arrived at. Even more humiliation.
I imagine the concept of national humiliation doesn't mean much for most readers. Except perhaps when your chosen home nation fails badly at the footy, or the UK does miserably at Eurovision. But for others it does, particularly those the Express has had a hand in cultivating and radicalising over the years. Brexit, shorn of its mystical trappings, is the withdrawal of the UK state from a common, cross-national system of regulations and legal obligations. Fed by false and distorted stories by the press, they fall on fertile ground because their experience of life chimes with a fantasy narrative of a world going to hell in a handcart. As Wolfgang Streeck observes, as capitalism seizes up and the world appears more uncertain, more frightening the more some people will reach for trusted anchors that short cut the complexity of the social. this is ideology as a crutch, a coping mechanism. In some countries that is religion, and in others it is nationalism. In the UK, it is Englishness specifically that is the anchor point of hard right Brexit nationalism. To be English is almost like being an ethnicity - it's possible to be Black British or Asian British and even be for Brexit, like a number of sitting Tory MPs, but they can never be English because English is exclusionary. It's something belonging to white people and white people alone.
And what does Englishness mean? Reformulated as an identity, it's much easier to grasp than multi-culty Britishness. It's masculine and loud, proud and brash, imperial and royalist, meat eating and beer swilling, an England that isn't all those foreign influences. An essential spark of national continuity running like a white and read cross stitch from the pure bred English past to a land under siege today gives us our line of purest descent. It wasn't for nothing that the EDL was both English and articulated itself as a defence. England and Englishness then is a foundation, a principle of coding the world in the whitest and blackest of terms.
As we saw while analysing Trump's support that, contrary to popular belief, were disproportionately well-off and economically secure. The assumption politicians, journos and not a few political and social scientists of equating being poor with economic insecurity and therefore open to far right populist nonsense forgets that those who have property and/or a fixed income, like pensioners, are going to be fearful of losing it. Hence why privileged and propertied layers in any population are more likely to support the party protecting those interests than those who don't. ABC politics. Leave very cannily spoke to these layers, the bedrock of Brexit, by talking up all the markers of insecurity and threat - waves of refugees, migrant workers signing on, money that would be better spent on the NHS, and did so by working a not insignificant proportion of them up into a fever pitch. In so doing, the dire warnings made by remain were masochistically incorporated and transformed into a virtue for leaving. In a world gone soft, the damage of Brexit, especially a no deal Brexit, is something to be embraced to shake things up and give the rising generation a taste of the school of hard knocks. Such adversity would then bring out the best of British (English) by allowing our national character's essential qualities come to the fore and refound a new identity on hard work and sacrifice.
These conceits held be people who won't have to do any of the sacrificing or hard work, help explain the near fanaticism and the potency of the potential for national humiliation. Seeing England weakened and begging from scraps from the EU angers on two counts - the shabby treatment of us by the EU (again, long stoked by the right wing press), and the supine and traitorous character of our MPs. Foreigners are going to foreign, but capitulation to this state of affairs is too much. They are colluding in national humiliation, making us a global laughing stock (what happened to Britons never will be slaves?) and frustrating the path to national salvation.
If this were just a bunch of harmless idiots, it could be dismissed. Unfortunately, there are links between betrayal mythologies and murder. We saw it with Jo Cox's murder, and we've found these arguments and tropes - including quotes from British columnists and British papers - in the miserable manifestos of spree killers. The danger the far right poses in the UK is not a mass movement of extra parliamentary thuggishness and street fighting, but of the radicalised-but-atomised carrying out acts of individual terror.
As the Tory party falters in the polls, it is virtually guaranteed to make a sharp turn to the right after May. Such a move would surely seal their electoral doom but the temptation will be to embrace the discourses of humiliation and betrayal. The consequences of which would be an acceleration of the main-streaming of these beliefs, normalising and naturalising them, and increasing the chances of violent and terroristic consequences.
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