Well, that’s it then, all the rhetoric is over and the
result is a Brexit. As the Chinese proverb says, beware of what you wish for –
you may get it.
Now I know that we are all being urged to treat this as a
“positive opportunity” and to “work together and work to heal our differences”.
Yeah, right. The Scots are seeing as a “positive opportunity” to finally get
their independence. The Irish are talking about a United Ireland. The Welsh are
crying for the money they’ll lose from the EU and Yorkshire have realised that
the development money they were getting
to places like Hull will also disappear A joke web-site for London to declare
independence and stay in the EU got 30,000 signatures in just a few hours. As a
Yorkshireman with Celtic roots I’m not proud of my country any more. No wonder
the President of the European Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, wants us to get
out as quickly as possible.
Looking at the map, it is pretty clear that it’s the English
agricultural areas and the needy development areas that produced the biggest
“leave” support – and they are the ones that receive the EU subsidies. Worst of
all there are so many “Leavers” interviewed on TV who are saying “I only voted
'leave' as a protest; I never thought it would happen”. For them, it must be like
walking up after a drunken one night stand with an ugly bedfellow and a hangover. “Oh my God,
what did I do?”
Having organised their postal votes, my children were in
Spain and Germany on Black Thursday. My son has a small company with customers
in Europe. His Facebook post read “I’m thinking of applying for political asylum”
and my daughter “with a Spanish husband and Scottish mother, I have options”.
Both of them are part of the wealth-creation class, doubtless they will be
asked, no forced, to pay additional taxes in future to continue to provide the
leaving areas with equivalent subsidies. There is no other way that the rebate to the
NHS could be funded. And me and my wife? We live outside the UK, but pay UK
taxes there which we can’t escape for reasons I won’t go into here, we rarely take
any of the services offered to people of our age, as we are not here to do so: we woke up on Friday
considerably poorer.
Of course there are those Bremainers clinging on to hope. A referendum
is advisory, so, in theory Parliament have the right to reject it: very unlikely, but
just possible. Since many were disenfranchised, like EU residents who have been
living in Britain for a long time but have never applied for British
Citizenship, since they didn’t need to – we belong to the EU and have signed up
for the free movement of people – an appeal could be made (where, the European
Court?) to enable them to vote retrospectively: hmmm, I can hear the screams
from the Brexit camp already. Parliament takes on board the rerun petition and authorise
another go, even have a best of three perhaps: in your dreams.
So, we are all going to have to live with consequences. Here
are a few that I predict. Many of those pensioners living in France, Spain, Italy
and elsewhere in the EU will discover their free health care there will no
longer be available there, sell up and come back to the UK, putting pressure on the
Health Service, so needing the illusory 350 million a week promised. The fall in the value of the pound will create higher priced manufactured
goods in shops, this will depress the High Street and cause inflation at the
same time, leading to higher interest rates, increased mortgage payments and so
less money to spend: hence, we will see higher rents and increased
unemployment. Some Europeans living here will go, particularly those in low
paid jobs, requiring increased immigration from poorer non-EU countries to do the
jobs that Brits won’t do. Scotland will leave
the United Kingdom, so Hadrian’s wall will be renamed Farage’s wall as it is strengthened to keep out all those Syrian refugees shown on his poster streaming unchecked into the North.
If you can feel anger coming through, you are right. Perhaps
later I will start to see a plus side, but not today. All I see is a positive
opportunity for damage limitation.