The problems with long queues
at Dover are, according
to the Home Secretary, nothing at all to do with Brexit. They are all the
fault of the ferry companies for accepting too many bookings, the Port of Dover
for allowing them to fill their ships rather than sail half-empty, bad weather at sea, and silly people who actually
want to go to a foreign country rather than stay in the glorious global UK, as advised
by John Redwood. For an alternative view, the Independent’s travel
correspondent, Simon Calder, explains here
exactly why the decision to end freedom of movement and apply the same rules to
UK travellers as already apply to other non-EU citizens has added to the
delays. In a nutshell, the requirement to ensure that no-one has stayed in the
EU for longer than allowed means that every page of every UK passport has to be
examined for entry and exit stamps, the dates checked to see which fall within
the last 180 days, and the total duration totalled to see if it’s more than 90
days, rather than the previous procedure which meant simply checking that the
passport was valid and belonged to the person showing it. For a coach carrying
50 people, that is going to take some time to do. And, of course, it’s going to
get worse, because – at the moment – few of us have many stamps in our
passports showing entry and exit dates; as time passes that number will
increase and the checks will take longer. And there’s a change in the pipeline meaning
that all travellers will have to be fingerprinted and have their facial
biometrics checked as well.
And yet, from the curious
perspective of the Brexiteers, Braverman has a point, of sorts. The aim of
Brexit was to ‘control our borders’; the emphasis is very much on the ‘our’.
They never intended checks to be reciprocal, and assumed that the rest of
Europe would recognise just how special and exceptional ‘we’ are. Ending ‘freedom
of movement’ was always envisaged as a ‘one-way’ process; it was the freedom of
foreigners to come to the UK which was to be ended, not the freedom of UK
citizens to travel to the rest of Europe. It’s the same attitude which leads to
people who come to the UK being ‘migrants’, whilst people going from the UK are
‘ex-pats’. Two completely different things. Apparently. And if you start from
that perspective, then it’s obvious that Brexit does not require the French to
impose the same level of border controls as the UK is imposing, which means the
queues are down to French bloody-mindedness rather than Brexit. For people who
think that way, Brexit was a chance for the UK to opt out of relaxed EU rules on
travel, not for the EU to change its own approach in any way. In a magnificent piece
of reverse logic, it also all ‘proves’ just how vindictive the EU is and how
much better off we are not being part of it.
Whilst, for most of us, logic
would suggest that the solution lies in negotiating a closer relationship with
the EU and restoring at least some elements of freedom of movement, the
Brexiteer argument is better expressed by John Redwood’s solution – ordinary
oiks should stay at home, with its corollary that queues would then be shorter
for the elite. That has the added advantage of preventing susceptible people
from being contaminated by strange European ideas as well. Another Brexit bonus.
1 comment:
opinion polling for March
http://thepeoplesflag.blogspot.com/2023/04/opinion-polling-for-march-2023.html
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