The main argument against the accusation goes like this: 17.4 million people voted to leave the EU; how can Remain voters possibly know all of their motives? A subsidiary argument questions whether that many Britons (representing 52% of the country) are really racist. It is inconceivable that Remainers could know the motives of half the country (and no substantial research has been carried out), so they then concede that "not all Leave voters are racist, but all racists voted Leave". Let us analyse this oft repeated slogan. If "all the racists" voted Leave, then all Remain voters are necessarily not racist.
Freedom of Movement
The main reason given for implying that Remain voters could not be racist, is that they voted for freedom of movement and that Vote Leave centred on ending freedom of movement - thereby limiting immigration to the UK. This seems a logical and plausible argument, but does the EU really have freedom of movement? Here are five reasons why EU freedom of movement is not all it seems.
1. Turning the Mediterranean into a "Cemetery for Refugees"
When Remain voters declare that they are not racist because they support freedom of movement, it is worth remembering that freedom of movement only applies to citizens from EU member states. What about the rights of non-EU citizens? Donald Trump's wall is rightly condemned as racist, but the EU already has its "wall" in the form of a sea. While migrants and refugees drowned in the Mediterranean sea, the EU (as an institution) did nothing. This led Turkey's president to accuse the EU of turning the Mediterranean into a "cemetery for refugees".
2. EU Failure to Share Refugees (once they are on EU soil).
During the migrant crisis, the EU left individual member States to act (alone). This led to the farcical situation where Greece (one of the EU's poorer countries and currently in severe financial difficulties) was left to process huge numbers of refugees - with no help from its EU family. Germany was one of the few countries to come out of the situation with any credit. Angela Merkel acted independently of the EU and against popular opinion to welcome in more than 1 million refugees. This led to a situation where Budapest’s Keleti railway station became overwhelmed with refugees bound for Germany - creating a scene reminiscent of Jews being forcibly put onto trains bound for concentration camps. Was this a case of freedom of movement (the refugees can go where they like), or a case where the refugees had to go to Germany, because nobody else wanted them? The evidence points to the latter, as Hungary was also allowed to reject all asylum requests at its border and in the Czech Republic the police wrote numbers on refugees hands. Far right governments in Poland, Austria and France all took measures to "protect" their boarders and limit migrants' ability to enter their counties: the EU failed to stop all this.
3. The EU-Turkey Migrant Deal.
The body of Alan Kurdi, September 2015 (Turkey) |
The first three examples focus on how the EU restricts migration from outside its borders. This alone casts doubts about the credibility of claims that a vote to remain within the EU is inherently non-racist. How, you might ask, is preventing the freedom of movement of non-European black and brown people who are often Muslims progressive? This is to assume that the EU allows freedom of movement for its mainly white, Christian, European citizens, but this is not necessarily the case, as the next examples make clear.
4. Bulgaria and Romania
Many people are surprised to hear that Bulgaria and Romania joined the EU in 2007. This is because the EU put restrictions on their freedom of movement that were not lifted until 2014, leading many people to falsely believe that these countries joined the EU then (rather than in 2007). The policy was driven by the fear of mass immigration from poorer countries into richer ones. The very principle of EU freedom of movement comes with restrictions. This policy discriminated against 29 million people based on their country of origin, regardless of their individuals' wealth. Discriminating against people based on where they come from seems like racism. The argument here is that EU freedom of movement was not universal between 2007-2014, and yet "EU Freedom of Movement" is lauded as a reason why Remain voters are not racist.5. The Collective Deportation of Roma people
The collective deportation of Roma people (mainly
from France and Italy) makes a mockery of EU claims to Freedom of Movement -
even for its own citizens. As with the treatment of Romanian and Bulgarian EU
citizens, this example undermines the EU principle of the right to equal
treatment. Not only is the EU happy to discriminate based on your country of
origin (in the case of Bulgaria and Romania), but it is also happy to
discriminate on the grounds of ethnicity (in the case of the Roma). It is
diffident to argue that this is not racist - let alone progressive.
Why are Remain voters necessarily not racist?
The Remainer slogan that "not all Leave voters are racist, but all
racists voted Leave" is often accompanied by the assertion that if you
voted Leave, you are tainted by the company that you keep. This converts the
concession that "not all Leave voters are racist" back into "all
Leave are racist"... this time because of their
association with racists (who all voted Leave). If we accept the logic of this
position, then all Remain voters are tainted by the association with the five
points above, which demonstrate that the EU is not so progressive when it comes
to freedom of movement (or indeed racism) as Remain voters would like to
think.
When a remained puts an EU flag filter on their social media profile
picture - to virtue signal that they are on the right side, the non-racist side
- they are effectively saying that they are okay with the EU policies described
above: restriction of freedom of movement if you come from a poor country;
deportation of Roma; inaction when migrants drown in the Med; leaving
individual States to act alone and bear the brunt of asylum applications; and a
deal to prevent non-European refugees from even making asylum applications in
the EU.
Vote Leave was Racist
Unable to substantiate the claim that "all the racists voted
Leave" (how could they? How is it possible to know how many racists are in
Britain, who they are and who they voted for?), Remainers change tack and
provide evidence, instead, that Vote Leave was racist. One of the most
deplorable images that comes to mind is Nigel Farage's anti-immigration poster
(pictured above). The implication is that if we remain in the EU, at a later
date Turkey will join and subsequently the UK will be powerless to stop
millions of Turks coming to live in Britain. The first point to note is that
Nigel Farage was not part of Vote Leave. This is a semantic point, because
Farage and UKIP were certainly on the same side as Vote Leave and Farage was
able to appeal to fears about immigration and link these to the referendum.
Furthermore, Vote Leave did play on similar fears, as reported in The Guardian, and
has been accused of racism, as reported in The Observer. Even if Vote Leave was racist,
the argument that voting Leave becomes racist by association falls down, for
the reasons given above.
The sleight of hand that shifted the argument from leaver voters being
racist to Vote Leave being racist quickly slides into examples of Vote Leave
lying, misleading, Cambridge Analytica, and so on: all perfectly good reasons
to discredit Vote Leave, but not evidence that Vote Leave was racist, and
certainly not evidence that all racists voted Leave.
All this belies the point
that it is obviously possible for Remain voters to be racist (there were more
than 16 million of them, statistically it is probably that some were racist)
Racists are perfectly capable of voting for their economic interests over their
preferences to limit immigration. In some cases, they will even benefit from
cheap EU labour - this does not mean that they cease to be racist. Consequently,
not all racists voted Leave (if some voted Remain).It is Possible to Vote Leave for Reasons Unrelated to Immigration and Racism
It seems almost surreal to have to make this point, but the case for
Brexit has mainly been made by those on the right - from Farage to Boris, Gove,
Cummings and so on. Those who argue that "all the racists voted
Leave" often refuse to accept that there is any credible, non-racist,
argument in favour of Brexit. There is a left-wing case for Brexit (known as
Lexit) that was barely reported during the campaign - and when it was reported
it was usually to discredit it. The point in summarising this position is not
to convince anybody that it is right - the point is to assert that it is possible to
have voted Leave for reasons other than racism. It goes something like this:
1. The EU is an
undemocratic technocracy.
2. The EU imposes
privatisation and market liberalisation. It is possible to have State-owned
industries, but we could not reinstate British Rail as an integrated,
monopoly public service, under EU law. Article 107 TFEU allows for state aid only if it is
compatible with the internal market and does not distort competition. The
EU TTIP deal with the USA demonstrates how the EU could force the UK to open up
the NHS to "competition" (effectively privatising the NHS). TTIP (now
lying low) would have been a corporate raid sanctioned by an unelected
government.
3. The EU imposes
austerity on its members - the treatment of Greece is given as a key
example and also evidence that the EU is hostile to left-wing governments. The
EU also imposed austerity on Ireland, Cyprus and Portugal. The banks come
before citizens when push comes to shove.
4. The single currency
has had devastating effects on EU citizens. It prevented Greece from
devaluing, resulted in Cypriots having to surrender their savings and it raised
the cost of living for many.
5. Youth unemployment is
high (43% in Greece, 39% in Spain and 35% in Italy) as a result of the
Euro and EU austerity measures.
6. The UK currently
exceeds EU Workers' rights: The vast majority of our rights belong to the
labour movement, not the EU.
7. The market is placed
above the worker: the EU has served metropolitan business elites better than it has
served the working classes.
8. The EU is, primarily,
a neoliberal, free market, trade block: leaving it would allow us to pursue a
more socialist agenda (if we voted for that).
While this list is selective, it does provide eight
reasons to vote for Brexit - none of which are racist (or stupid, ignorant,
bigoted etc). This, coupled with the indictment of EU policies on freedom of
movement and asylum application processes demonstrates why voting to leave the
EU is not inherently racist.
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