A RICH STEW
The last few weeks have been so caught up in abrasive EU
meetings, deafening political turmoil at home, alarms from across the Atlantic
and the unbearably poignant centenary of the Armistice that I have found it
impossible to concentrate on other more calming matters. So, forgive me as I
dive in!
Never has the gulf, nay the
abyss, between Provincial and Metropolitan England been so obvious as over
Brexit. Provincial England remains staunchly in favour of a liberating Brexit;
their England must defend her independent sovereignty and retain control over
her destiny. They are irritated and even disgusted by the slavish obeisance of
the Metropolitans to the whims and diktats
of Brussels. The Establishment in government, in the City, in many professions
and in business has a profound financial vested interest in the status quo. I
had expected these people to resist Brexit fiercely (in fact they lazily
assumed the referendum would be easily won) and now they argue that the 2016
referendum was deficient, although Cameron’s Remainer government called it.
They do not respect the result, although the referenda in 1975 about remaining
in the EU, and several devolution polls subsequently, were never challenged –
well, after all, they went the Establishment’s way!
Leading Tory Remainer Anna Soubry |
Labour Remainer Chuka Umunna |
The Last-Ditch opposition we see
today is unexpected to me; I would have anticipated vigorous efforts to modify
terms and constructively engage in the negotiations. But not a bit of it, only
root and branch hostility, suggesting to me that many Remainers are willing to
sacrifice their country’s well-being for their own purposes – an attitude I
find deeply unpatriotic and unacceptable. Shame upon them!
It is idle to pretend that the
Leavers have not made a complete mess of their Brexit strategy. Feebly led by
tepid Leaver Theresa May, the Tory government has given every possible weak
signal to its electorate and to the EU’s hard-line negotiators in terms of
indecision, fudge and double-talk. Our best cards – the size of our divorce
settlement payment, our defence and security capabilities, our territorial
waters and our trading connections have all been squandered or compromised.
Some kind of agreement may be more or less ready but we are having our tails
tweaked by an Irish Republican government, for generations hostile to the UK,
and an EU determined to punish Britain for leaving their precious cartel. Almost certainly we will not sign on these
terms and we will move to a “hard” Brexit, with Theresa May the first political
casualty and grim ill-will legacies towards our neighbours. The horrid prospect
of a Corbyn administration would then indeed loom large. Indeed, this episode
is shaping up to be “the worst failure of British statesmanship since Suez” in
Boris Johnson’s brother Jo’s words as he resigned from Theresa’s government.
To turn to less weighty matters,
President Trump was oblivious to the sensitivities of Armistice Day in Paris.
He quarrelled sharply with Macron over French enthusiasm for a European Army to
defend Europe against Russia, China (and America!). Trump did attend a ceremony
at the Arc de Triomphe, although visibly upset that the King of Morocco should
fall asleep on the dais beside him, but he failed to visit an American War
Cemetery outside Paris (too much rain!) or to attend a Macron inspired “Peace
Conference” / Gallic talking shop – understandably not Trump’s kind of thing.
Instead Putin earned dix pointes for
turning up!
Macron strokes Trump's knees with Imperial insouciance in Paris |
The weekend gave us a heartening
demonstration of British dignity, restraint and controlled emotion. The
Centenary of the 1918 Armistice, bringing to an end a cruel war which saw
880,000 British dead, was sure to be a special moment. The sharp grief of
families has now past as has the suffering of the maimed or wounded, but their
sacrifice will not be forgotten. The Fallen were duly honoured at the Festival
of Remembrance at the Albert Hall on Saturday at a most moving mixture of
music, poetry and parade, ending in a rainstorm of poppies.
The traditional Cenotaph service
and wreath-laying, including the music of Purcell, Elgar and many others
brought back so many memories of generations past and profound thanks to the
brave and invincible present generation. Like a million others, we walked on
Sunday morning to the local war memorial, us to Folkestone with many hundreds
of others and paid our respects. Portraits of Great War soldiers had been drawn
into the sand to await the tide in 1,000 locations – we had the matchless poet
Wilfred Owen, killed one week before the Armistice.
Wilfred Owen's portrait drawn in the sand at Folkestone |
The timeless scene in Whitehall |
Whatever Remainers and Brussels
may say, it is simply impossible that a people like ours will accept domination
and control from Continental Europe. We wish to be friends and good neighbours
but as the old song goes; “Britons,
never, never, never shall be slaves!”
SMD
13.11.18
Text Copyright © Sidney
Donald 2018
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