But is this optimism justified? Are my friends not the same people who believed, in 2016, that a ‘Leave’ victory in the referendum was impossible?
Noxious climate
Caution is all the more necessary precisely because Johnson’s management is anything but controlled, as demonstrated by his actions with regards to both Brexit and Covid-19. The word most often used is "chaos." It is almost as if the Conservative Party has overtaken the Labour Party in their public displays of division and contradiction. The recent departure of Dominic Cummings, Johnson’s éminence grise, was only the latest and most dramatic illustration of the poisonous climate within the UK government and the Conservative Party at large. At a time when the Labour opposition has finally found a competent, moderate and responsible leader in Keir Starmer, it is the Conservative Party that appears to be disintegrating. But the next election— barring unforeseen circumstances—will not be happening for a long time, and much can happen in the next four years.
Internationally, Donald Trump’s defeat is—at least symbolically—a setback for Johnson. However, the ‘closeness’ between the two should not be exaggerated as, apart from their populist leanings and their hair color, they share very little in terms of culture, education and background. The Prime Minister suffers from his weakness and indecisiveness, and the outgoing President from his over-forcefulness.
What really weakens Britain’s position today is not Trump’s departure from the White House, but that of the UK from the European Union. After Brexit, Joe Biden will be even more tempted to look first to Berlin and, ideally for us Frenchmen, towards the Franco-German power base. Britain’s influence is shrinking like a skin of sorrow and Brexit, like a magnifying mirror, highlights its intrinsic limitations and weaknesses.
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