On Wednesday, 8 March a high profile
panel discussed the future of
Britain’s relationship with the EU at Nottingham University. Nottingham’s
Vice Chancellor Professor David Greenaway was joined by Charles Clarke, former
Home Secretary under Labour, Vince Cable, former Secretary of State for
Business, Innovation and Skills in the coalition government of the
Conservatives and his Liberal Democrats in 2010. Professor Panicos Demetriades,
former governor of the Central Bank of Cyprus, complemented the panel.
Professor Jagjit Chadha of the National Institute of Economic and Social
Research was the chair. In this blog post, I will briefly comment on the discussions,
highlighting how they were a perfect reflection of Britain’s general merchant's perspective on European integration.
Large parts of the western working class now seem to gather around right-wing
populists, demagogues and racists. They vote for reactionary and fascistoid
political parties. They helped to vote the UK out of the EU, to make Trump
president of the world's superpower number one, and they vote so massively for the
far right political parties so that they have government power in sight throughout
several of Europe's most populous countries. In this guest post, Asbjørn Wahl assesses these
developments from a labour perspective and reflects on a progress way forward.