A lot of hot
air has been expended in recent days about the difference between ‘access to’
and ‘membership of’ the single market, and about the fact that Labour’s AMs
‘voted with the Tories’ in response to a Plaid Cymru-tabled motion.
In general, I’m
singularly unimpressed with the various parties’ regular practice of accusing
everyone else of ‘voting with X’ on a particular issue. It always strikes me as being a way of
avoiding discussion of the substantive issue by resorting to simplistic insult
rather than a way of throwing light on the issue. In any situation where there is a binary
choice of voting for or against a proposition, politicians can only choose
one of those options (or, of course, they can abdicate all responsibility, and choose
to sit on their hands and abstain). One
would hope that politicians would be mature enough to decide how to vote on the
basis of the proposition itself, rather than on the basis of who else might be
voting on which side. Being on the same
side as another party in such a binary situation isn’t the same as forming a
coalition with that other party, or even agreeing with them on policy – it’s
perfectly possible for two parties to oppose any given policy on totally
different grounds. To hear some of them
talk, one might think that voting the same way as party X – usually, but not
invariably, the Tories – is equivalent to forming a pact with the devil
himself.
Returning to
the question of ‘access’ or ‘membership’, whilst it could be argued that
‘membership’ is simply a special case of ‘access’ and is therefore included
within the broader term, there clearly is an important unresolved question
about the nature and extent of access by UK, and therefore Welsh, businesses to
the single market post-Brexit. I agree
with the thrust of the Plaid proposal in the Assembly that membership is
preferable to any lesser form of access in the interests of economic continuity
and stability, but I’m also convinced that full membership without accepting a
lot of other rules and regulations, including free movement of people, is an
unattainable goal.
The political
question is about how we respond to that contradiction. It’s been depressing to see Labour AMs and MPs
lining up to declare that free movement is no longer acceptable because we have
to accept and adjust to the ‘legitimate concerns’ that people have about
immigration. What these ‘legitimate concerns’
are is never spelt out; the position of said AMs and MPs looks more like
capitulation to a vague and prejudiced xenophobia than a thought-out policy
position. It’s increasingly clear,
though, that Labour, like the Tories, is moving to a position of accepting that
full membership of the single market is an impossible goal, as a result of the
conditions which they themselves are seeking to impose.
Part of the
Labour response to Plaid’s motion was to describe it as a motion whose main aim
was to be the basis of a press release afterwards. I think they’re right to say that, but don’t
see anything wrong with doing that if the purpose of the press release were to
highlight the issue itself and the dangers that we face if we damage our
trading position simply in order to secure more control over EU migration. The bigger problem for me wasn’t using a motion and
a press release in that fashion; it was that the publicity which the party
sought was more about the playground politics of who voted with whom than with
the real and important issue of the economic impact of having to leave the
single market as a direct result of demanding controls over migration.
If we are to
convince people that arbitrary reductions in migration will be economically
damaging, we need to address and debate that question directly and make the
link clear, rather than indulge in simplistic point-scoring. To date, few politicians – in any party –
seem willing to do that.
5 comments:
Petulant grandstanding sums up Welsh politics very well. All parties do it at the expense of actual policy debate, but until the public demands a more grown up politics were stuck with the he said, she said nonsense.
This latest episode shows everything that’s wrong with Plaid Cymru’s strategy, they’ve got the right issue, serious economic damage to the Welsh economy because of tariffs, but they can’t make a clear and credible argument to the wider welsh public to support it, instead they attack the Labour Party hoping that this will somehow magically turn into support for them at elections.
As for Labour aping UKIP its surely the least surprising aspect of the new post Brexit world, Labour in Wales will cling on to power at all costs and are chasing UKIP voters to ensure it, so adopting an anti-migrant and anti EU single market policies is the obvious way forward for them.
The public in Wales doesn't want or care about 'a more grown up politics'.
The public in Wales just wants the same or less and less politics. Otherwise there'd be a demand for more. And arguably a demand for better.
Let's face it, we in Wales are indelibly politically intertwined with our closest neighbour. Why do we persist in trying to convince ourselves that the few differences we might have necessitate 'the Welsh Assembly' and all its nonsense.
Anon 15:27,
Or, alternatively, why do we kid ourselves that the similarities between Wales and England are so great that we only need 'the UK Parliament' and all its nonsense? In truth, neither that statement nor the one to which it is a response contribute much to debate about anything. But then contributing to debate isn't really part of your aim is it?
Your article implies that there is a positive link between immigration and economic benefits ... and to argue otherwise is to align with the dreaded UKIP. Aren't you John, playing the same game you accuse Plaid Cymru (and Welsh politics in general) of doing?
Cwm Cymro,
"Your article implies that there is a positive link between immigration and economic benefits I don't understand why you think that; I don't think it said that at all. (That doesn't mean that there isn't a positive link, by the way - I happen to think that there is, in the sense that, taken overall, immigration delivers more economic benefits than costs, it's just that that wasn't the point of this post.) This post was more about the fact that arbitrary controls on free movement of people (which, incidentally, is not the same thing as immigration) will have an economic cost as a result of barring membership of the single market.
I'm afraid that I simply do not understand what the rest of your comment is trying to say.
Post a Comment