May was the Daily Mail's PM. The day after it told her to go, she went

It was clear from the start. Theresa May was not qualified to be prime minister in the best of times and was deeply unsuitable when imagination and public appeal are essential – leaving aside implementing a strategy in the country’s interest. I showed why this was so at the time.

But her failure is not hers alone. She was the remarkably resilient and determined advocate of an impossible project which in the end broke even her. The question is not just the personal one of how she had the strength and fortitude to keep going but where the policy she battled for originated from.

Of all the travesties and abuse levelled at her, much of which she deserved, perhaps the most unfair that she certainly did not is that she was really a Remainer all along. This lazy slander will come back to haunt the Faragists and Borisites who perpetrated it.

For what May embraced, “with all her heart” as she said more than once, was an approach to the EU laid out and set down by Paul Dacre and the Daily Mail. I first realised this after listening to her first speech to the Tory Party conference as its leader. I wrote about it in openDemocracy and then developed the analysis in my book The Lure of Greatness.

Below, I reproduce the chapter on May from the book, written before she called the 2017 election that was to prove such a disaster for her.

I try to show that Brexit was a fully formed passion that she embraced: one she had doubtless been imbibing daily along with her constituents. I show the form of Brexit she espoused was not an arbitrary stipulation of red-lines but the principles of a deal she made to back Paul Dacre’s definition of what had to be done. Dacre being the formidable editor of Britain’s most influential newspaper for over a quarter century.

The critical speech that set this out was not her Lancaster House one but the very first that she made when she pitched for the premiership the day after Cameron resigned.

A crucial moment that foretold May’s doom was when Dacre was removed as the Daily Mail’s editor by a proprietor known to be pro-European. The paper’s new editor preferred a softer and more sensible Brexit if such is possible to Dacre’s demand for sovereign independence. But he continued the paper’s total support of Theresa May herself as strongly as he could – against the head-bangers of the ERG on the one hand and the ‘Marxist’ Corbyn on the other.

In a final effort to get her deal through last week, May said that she would accept that MPs could vote on putting it to a referendum, provided it had been passed by the Commons. She made it clear that she herself would vote against. This was hardly a concession. Caroline Lucas, a determined advocate of a People’s Vote tweeted that May was trying to put lipstick on a pig (which some of us felt was unfair to the porcine genus).

But it was too much for Tories maddened by the prospect of having to defend their British nationalism before the British people. The Daily Mail agreed, in sadness not anger. “The damage to democratic trust would almost be too grim to contemplate. Even for the Mail, which has been Mrs. May’s most loyal supporter, this is at best high risk and at worst a dangerous compromise.” It then continued, “no one can doubt she has stoically and commendably done her best. But the Mail reluctantly concludes this is a gamble too far.”

That was Wednesday morning. It was the execution of the paper’s candidate. The next day she agreed to leave and on Friday morning announced her resignation. The Mail then filled its front page with a picture of the prime minster breaking down in tears under the headline A CRYING SHAME.

There is no need to repeat the assessments of the impossibilities she exacerbated. Amongst the instant reflections, Chris Grey’s is the most thorough.

But there are two issues that needs much greater attention. Both point to the collapse of Britain’s traditional political leadership.

Brexit is the product of newspapers, their proprietors and journalists. Rupert Murdoch’s man has been Michael Gove, who is struggling. Boris Johnson is the creature of the weird, reclusive Barclay Brothers owners of the Telegraph and Spectator, who originally made their money, suitably enough, from gambling. May, as we see, embraced the Dacre’s Mail as her route to office. But this is a dying industry desperate for circulation and running out of candidates to take over the helm of Britain’s Brexit breakdown.

Second, there was a rationale to May’s painfully cobbled together withdrawal agreement. The best description of why it was a practical way to both leave the EU and stay close enough to it to avert disaster is set out by Martin Sandbu in his closing contribution to Britain Beyond Brexit edited by Gavin Kelly and Nick Pearce. It keeps the UK in the EU’s regulated space for traded goods while taking the costs of exit for services where the City of London can make good its losses by remaining free of European constraints as it services the world of funding and money-laundering, from the UK’s far-flung tax havens via the Middle East to Russia and China. It means, however, accepting de facto membership of Europe’s customs union, which also solves the problem of having no physical infrastructure on the Northern Irish border. Of course the processes of adjudication will have to be paid for. It thus can’t be the case that the UK ‘takes back’ full control of its ‘laws and money’ even if those who cross the human border from EU states to settle and work can no longer claim the freedom to do so.

This utterly reasonable ‘compromise’ defies the central passion of Anglo-British nationalism and its Trumpian prospects. May tried to get it through by administrative means while claiming, falsely, that nothing had changed in the original Daily Mail agenda to which she pinned her flag. The argument I set out two years ago of which I’m proud is that “a profound, unstoppable, reimagining of what the United Kingdom means” is underway. This demands a widespread, public mobilisation both for Brexit and to prevent it. May’s personal incapacities as a mean-minded administrator meant she could never lead such a movement.

The Daily Mail Takes Power

The referendum’s outcome caught everyone unprepared. Michael Gove, whose forceful decision to support Leave turned the campaign, was fast asleep. He had gone to bed confident that he had made his stand and the country would continue as before. He and his wife Sarah Vine were woken by a call at 4.45, as she recounted in her column. ‘“Michael?” a voice said. “Michael, guess what? We’ve won!” There was a short pause while he put on his glasses. “Gosh,” he said. “I suppose I had better get up.” The government too was taken by surprise. Cameron simply resigned. Only the Bank of England had a contingency plan, to provide extra credit to steady the markets. This was hardly long-term.

One single figure with any standing had thought about implementation. He had long abandoned his one-time ambition to become Conservative prime minister. Instead, from the back benches he became his own government’s – and especially Theresa May’s – leading critic of their assault on liberty. In February David Davis published a lengthy paper in Conservative Home filled with graphs that detailed and advocated the golden promises of Brexit. Immediately after the referendum he set out how best to negotiate them. He was as surprised as anyone to be given the job, as Secretary of State for Brexit, to deliver what he suggested. May turned to her bête noire with instructions that he become her white knight. There was no one else.

Following Cameron’s resignation, the Brexiteers had fallen out amongst themselves in farcical confusion, and May emerged as the only disciplined and serious politician in contention. Far from being prepared herself, she had supported Remain. The way she backed the Cameron government had been low-key, reflecting her loathing of his and Osborne’s methods. But in a private, off-the-record discussion at Goldman Sachs on 26 May 2016, a month before the vote, she told its financial specialists: ‘I think the economic arguments are clear … I think being part of a 500-million trading bloc is significant for us. I think … a lot of people will invest here in the UK because it is the UK in Europe,’ and: ‘one of my messages in terms of the issue of the referendum, actually we shouldn’t be voting to try to recreate the past, we should be voting for what is right for the future’.

The country voted the other way. Cameron was decapitated. The Tory Party leadership contest was announced on the evening of 29 June, May declared her bid to be prime minister next morning – and set out what has now become the UK’s policy on Brexit. She decided she was the best person to ‘recreate the past’. At least she understood what she was doing as she put herself forward to be the party’s and the country’s leader. This is how she explained her change of mind:

“We’ve just emerged from a bruising and often divisive campaign. Throughout, I made clear that on balance I favoured staying inside the EU – because of the economic risk of leaving, the importance of cooperation on security matters, and the threat to the Union between England and Scotland – but I also said that the sky would not fall in if we left … now the decision has been made, let’s make the most of the opportunities … the task in front of us is no longer about deciding whether we should leave or remain. The country has spoken, and the United Kingdom will leave the EU. The job now is about uniting the Party, uniting the country – securing the Union – and negotiating the best possible deal for Britain.

The sense of the vulnerability of the Union as her priority is present from the start:

"The process of withdrawal will be complex, and it will require hard work, serious work, and detailed work. And it means we need a Prime Minister who is a tough negotiator, and ready to do the job from day one.”

And Brexit itself? A famous phrase was born.

"First, Brexit means Brexit. The campaign was fought, the vote was held, turnout was high, and the public gave their verdict. There must be no attempts to remain inside the EU, no attempts to re-join it through the back door, and no second referendum. The country voted to leave the European Union, and it is the duty of the Government and of Parliament to make sure we do just that. Second, there should be no general election until 2020. There should be a normal Autumn Statement, held in the normal way at the normal time, and no emergency Budget.”

She then developed an unequivocal statement that promised a government that works for everyone; to alleviate the injustices of life for blacks, for women and for white working-class men. It was said to have been drafted for her by Nick Timothy, who had immediately joined her campaign team having, significantly, worked for Leave. He is now her joint chief-of-staff. They added this barb for Cameron and Osborne:

"Frankly, not everybody in Westminster understands what it’s like to live like this, and some need to be told that what the government does isn’t a game. It’s a serious business that has real consequences for people’s lives.”

May had met with Dacre before she made this leadership announcement and knew his concerns . The same evening ‘it must be Theresa’ was emblazoned across the Mail’s front page. Readers were directed to the editorial, which bears Dacre’s hallmarks. Normally, it said, the Mail ‘would not show its hand until the end of a contest’. But with the Tories disintegrating before the public’s eyes, ‘what the country needs most is a solid and steady hand on the tiller’. It added that May should bring senior Brexiteers into the government with her. Which she duly did. ‘The need for a new era of cleaner, more honest, gimmick-free politics has never been greater’.

The next day the Mail ran a profile of May that dug out everything positive that could be found. Its headline in bold was: ‘The vicar’s daughter who met her husband at a Conservative disco: Deadly serious. Utterly steely. After all those Etonians, could this grammar school girl, whose grandmothers were in service, be just what Britain needs?’ A question so loaded it fell off the page. Buried in the profile, a reader could discern reports suggesting she had a chronic inability to delegate.

In the short time span between the referendum and her standing for leader, Theresa May did not so much win over the Daily Mail, as the Daily Mail, its voice, views and priorities, recruited her. With no record of originality her version of profound reflection is to declare that she ‘gets things done’. After twenty-five years in politics, Theresa May has no obvious connections to any think tank. Although she works with Nick Timothy, who has a considerable grasp of Conservative history and policy, she herself shows no interest in ideas, saying only that in order to conserve you must change. As the country faces an unprecedented concatenation of economic, strategic, diplomatic and constitutional uncertainty, and needs a leader with imagination, it has got one who prides herself in getting on with the job, not rethinking what the job is. Serious and determined, May is a first-rate second-rank politician. Beggars can’t be choosers, Dacre must have decided, and did his best to project her as the new Thatcher, full of strength and inner conviction.

Every holder of her office is now haunted by the way Margaret Thatcher reshaped the country. But Thatcher’s conviction was harnessed to a formidable programme of domestic transformation and a new culture of government, whether you liked it or not. During her four years leading her party in opposition, Thatcher and her team prepared for power, spending meeting after meeting analysing the nature of British decline and trying to understand how to confront it. John Hoskyns, who became her head of policy in Downing Street, ‘spent a year preparing a huge diagram showing how all aspects of decline were connected’. Not only was Thatcher the candidate of a significant network of strategists, supported by think tanks, she carried Hayek in her handbag and generated what her official biographer calls ‘wonderment at the phenomenon of a party leader in search of ideas’.

The contrast with May could not be greater. Despite this there was a striking and formidable coherence to the general direction set by the new prime minister as soon as she formed her government. Overnight, all her ministers were singing from the same song-sheet, and doing so comfortably. She turned the party’s face against the city slickers of globalisation and positioned its social and economic aims to support the ‘just about managing’, the very people Labour’s Ed Miliband had been scorned for identifying as the ‘squeezed middle’ in 2010 – and was greeted as if she were extraordinarily far-sighted. In all this, she adopted a formed ideology and set of attitudes: she embraced the perspective of the Daily Mail. She spoke like its editorials: in short, clear, purposive sentences that left you in no doubt what to think. Across her party everyone grasped the culture and its pitch – they had been reading it year in and year out: ‘The British people have spoken’; ‘Brexit means Brexit’; ‘hard work’; ‘serious business’; ‘no backsliding on Brexit’, ‘no second referendum’. Above all, Theresa May shared the Mail’s sense of England’s grievances, especially with migrants – and England’s desire to be British.

These are circulation-building stances for a newspaper. They offer the clarity, spirit and alarmism readers enjoy. But not the politics for a situation as grave as Brexit. In her first speech to her party conference as leader, in October 2015, the prime minister announced she would activate Article 50 in March 2017. It was a moment of utmost gravity. She should have – but did not – recognise, measure and reach out to the immense divisions that Brexit could open within the country. She could have – but did not – consider the implications for the entire continent that Britain once helped liberate from fascism. Instead, her tone, brevity and practical approach were identical to a Daily Mail editorial. There was no offer of an open process to explore how best to proceed that might muddy the water. It was not inclusive, it was directive. The Financial Times reports that at ‘the heart of her new administration is a coterie of loyal and long-serving advisers’. Two exceptions: her private secretary, inherited from Cameron – ‘It may be no coincidence that he came from a security background’– and her new official spokesperson … the former political editor of the Daily Mail.

She took into Downing Street a tight team drawn from her six years in the Home Office. Its bleak culture at the coalface of immigration, border control, surveillance and what America calls homeland security reinforced an approach that fits with the Mail and has a specific government culture of surveillance and selection behind it. Will Davies calls it the ‘protective state’ that is ‘ready to discriminate, and won’t be ashamed to admit it. It will discriminate regarding good and bad economic activity; it will discriminate between good and bad migrants; it will discriminate between good and bad ways of life’ – and it will introduce grammar schools to discriminate between children. To fulfil this you need to know who is good and bad, and May’s most lasting legislative achievement before she became premier was the Investigatory Powers Act that became law at the end of 2016. This legalised all the illegal bugging and snooping that the UK’s deep state had been undertaking. The Act is the most intrusive authorisation of powers of surveillance in the West, permitting police and a wide range of officials the right to monitor metadata without a warrant.

Theresa May has become already a historic figure in the way her labile predecessor Cameron was not. She may be limited but she has integrity. Even though she supported Remain, she is now genuine in her commitment. We have seen that Cameron’s team identified those who wanted to leave the EU in their ‘hearts’ but were willing to follow the wisdom of their ‘heads’ and pockets and vote for Europe, to be the key constituency they had to convince. Theresa May shows every sign that she was one of them, willing to support remain pragmatically but longing to sign up to Leave in her heart. One public emblem of this is the 40-page pamphlet she co-authored with Nick Timothy in 2007, on how to restore parliament’s sovereignty over EU legislation. It expresses frustration with the failure of the UK system to get a grip on EU legislation that is regarded as an intrusion.

When England’s voters defied the pragmatic argument about the economic benefits of EU membership and Cameron resigned, they gave May a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to become prime minister. Her heart leapt at the chance. She has embraced what she is doing. She is not being hypocritical or lying. Her heartbeat is synchronised with each edition of the Daily Mail . It provided the no-nonsense, Brexit-means-Brexit headline approach she embraced. It set cutting back on immigrants – which is different from being in control of how many come – as a top objective, along with removing the UK from the orbit of the European Court of Justice (which adjudicates the EU’s single market). Both these now count for more than economic growth. This means the real Brexit.

At first, no one in the UK’s business circles and across Europe was sure what would happen. There were many options, many ways to Brexit. It dawned on them that what May stated when she announced her candidacy, and then in her October 2016 speech to the Tory conference, she meant. More than that, she was relishing the challenge. She is enjoying her role, as the woman who will deliver Brexit. She wants to put immigration control and removing the UK from the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice, before the economy. For her, it is about self-government and taking back control. Her control. Not the people’s: they have spoken, and that is enough.

May’s problem, and more important, her country’s, is that such an approach is not going to work. To embark on any considerable public enterprise you need three things. First, you need the ambition to really want the objective. It might change its final shape as other forces impinge, but you must fully will the end in its broad dimensions. Second, you must will the means: the effort, the daily discipline, the demands on others, the focus, determination and, when necessary, patience. With respect to Brexit, Theresa May has these two aspects in full degree. She really wants Brexit as she conceives it. She is really determined to achieve it by every means at her disposal.

But there is a third aspect as well, that is out of your control. There need to be the resources to carry you through. These are not just money, time and skills. They include, above all else, other people ready to join you, who want to make your aims their own, who release energy and invention and solve problems and think like you while thinking for themselves. The greater the aim, the more you need others acting independently to achieve the goal. If it is transformative, as Brexit is, it needs to become a movement. If it cannot create popularity, the effort will fail.

Theresa May does not have the capacity to appeal to a movement across all Britain that can make a success of Brexit in this way. She needs people and the country to come together, but her approach is sundering the nations and fragmenting the English. Yet she can steer no other course. Without the ability to orchestrate, which involves trusting others to play well, she cannot mobilise the unified support she needs and already claims as fact. On 17 January, the prime minister set out her Plan for Britain not to the House of Commons but to the ambassadors from the EU, assembled in Lancaster House. ‘After all the division and discord,’ she told them, ‘the country is coming together.’ Clearly, it is not. The words felt more like an instruction.

The rigidity to her approach stems from the trap she finds herself in, of Britishness and Brexit. As we have seen, it fell to her to fuse together the Cameron Remain campaign vision of a World Britain and the Leave campaign’s Global Britain into her own Big Britishness. She has borrowed the Leave campaign’s slogan. But for her it necessitates a domestic programme of social intervention and equalisation not a bonfire of regulations. To deliver her Brexit means mobilising the public to ‘come together’. This needs a big, open democratic process, and something else too. For as May warned before the referendum, there will be serious costs and losses for the British economy. She needs to level with the people, raise their morale with inspiring defiance, to prepare the country for a five- to ten-year turnaround if all goes well. But how can she do this when the promise of Brexit was a treasure chest of free trade? She herself did not make this claim and has been careful not to repeat it. Her colleagues did. But she failed to repudiate their optimism at the start. By implication, the public is looking for hundreds of millions for the NHS, oodles of business from global expansion and a great spurt of growth as the country is ‘liberated’ from Euro-restrictions.

Managing this expectation will be hard enough. She carries an even larger constraint around her neck. Retaining ‘our precious Union’ is her stated priority. What she regards as the glittering necklace of Britishness is becoming her noose. It prevents any frank and democratic process that would, for example, be a space where the Scots and Northern Irish could work for their own relationship with the EU. For her, a child of Churchillism, their leaving and thereby ending Britain is unimaginable.

There is only one route to May’s Brexit, therefore. It has to be imposed: ‘There must be no attempts to remain inside the EU, no attempts to re-join it through the back door, and no second referendum.’ The word ‘must’ is stamped on the whole thing from the start, in her election address, before she even was prime minister. It defines her approach in the language of the Mail. ‘The country’ will not be allowed to change its mind so far as she is concerned.

This is hardly the best way to bring people together. At the beginning of her Plan for Britain, the prime minister said Brexit ‘means taking the opportunity of this great moment of national change to step back and ask ourselves what kind of country we want to be’. But she was not asking that all-important question, she was answering it – and cutting off any further debate. Her conclusion: ‘I want us to be a truly Global Britain.’ She mentioned ‘Global Britain’ eleven times and the phrase is capitalised in the official text of the speech on the Downing Street website; the harmonics with Great Britain, the lure of the time we shaped the world, is inescapable.

Imperial greatness was a joint project and to have a chance of working ‘going global’ must be too. At one point May asserts: ‘A stronger Britain demands that we do something else – strengthen the precious union between the four nations of the United Kingdom’, but later, ‘one of the reasons that Britain’s democracy has been such a success for so many years is the strength of our identity as one nation’. Is it four nations or is it one nation? To the Europeans she explained that Brexit is an attempt ‘to restore, as we see it … national self-determination …’ But if the Scots ask for national self-determination, they are sharply condemned as divisive. The prime minister is not being muddled: she is having it both ways. The English have done this for far too long. As I showed earlier, to the world the English see themselves as one nation: Britain. Amongst ourselves, we can talk of our four different nations. As she put it to the Scots, speaking in Glasgow, the government is determined that there will be no new barriers ‘within our own union’. The words ‘our own’ reveal what is taking place. What is projected by her as a British voice is heard in Scotland as the cold command of England claiming possession.

The prime minister has succumbed to a most human, and in a leader the most dangerous, of pressures. She is projecting her desire as reality. ‘After all the division and discord, the country is coming together’ when it isn’t. ‘The referendum was divisive at times. And those divisions have taken time to heal’ – as if they have healed. What we are witnessing in Theresa May is an English voice, in charge of its ‘precious union’, determined to bend Britain, and therefore in the first place Scotland, to its will. Already, her insistence is tying her in knots. Writing in the magazine of the Holyrood parliament, she told Scots to behave, saying:

“When we take decisions on a UK-basis, whether in a referendum or a general election, every individual has an equal voice. So, in June last year, when the UK as a whole was asked if we should leave or remain in the European Union, every voter had an equal say and the collective answer was final.”

The logic seems impeccable until you examine it. If every individual had an equal voice in general elections, we would have proportional representation and coalition government. More important, who asked ‘the UK as a whole’? The prime minister identifies herself with this question. It presumes the ‘collective answer’ that she claims was demonstrated by its answer. Any doubts about the centrality and force of May’s determination with respect to Scotland were blown away by her extraordinary speech in Glasgow to the Scottish Conservatives, which included:

“I wanted to make clear that strengthening and sustaining the bonds that unite us is a personal priority for me … the fundamental unity of the British people which underwrites our whole existence as a United Kingdom … We need to build a new ‘collective responsibility’ across the United Kingdom, which unites all layers of government … I am determined to ensure that as we leave the EU, we do so as one United Kingdom … a unique responsibility to preserve the integrity and future viability of the United Kingdom, which we will not shirk … at the heart of the United Kingdom is the unity of our people: a unity of interests, outlook and principles. This transcends politics and institutions, the constitution and the economy … We are four nations, but at heart we are one people. That solidarity is the essence of our United Kingdom …”

A unity that ‘transcends’ even the constitution. In the age of Brexit and Trump, when rebellion against traditional authority is the spirit of the time, I’d think twice about laying down the law in such terms, that insist on her personal priority as a matter of fate.

She claims she has answered the question ‘What kind of country are we?’ It is Global Britain with our Parliamentary Sovereignty. When she explained this to Europe’s ambassadors, she added:

“Our political traditions are different. Unlike other European countries, we have no written constitution, but the principle of Parliamentary Sovereignty is the basis of our unwritten constitutional settlement. We have only a recent history of devolved governance – though it has rapidly embedded itself – and we have little history of coalition government. The public expect to be able to hold their governments to account very directly, and as a result supranational institutions as strong as those created by the European Union sit very uneasily in relation to our political history and way of life.”

As I argued above, there is an incompatibility between absolutist Britain and the EU. But you can see here how the residues of Churchillist defiance and Thatcherite conviction have fused into a toxic stubbornness. May assumes that her holy trinity of the Union, the unwritten constitution and Parliamentary Sovereignty are in fine fettle. She has to. But they are not. They are fundamentally weakened and incoherent. The EU ambassadors to the Court of St James have their advisers and consult widely. They are aware of the ailing nature of the UK constitution. They will not be taken in, even if they are impressed by the inflexibility of May’s personal determination.

May is a grammar-school traditionalist. Her chosen method for delivery is a return to Whitehall Knows Best – which at its frequent worst is secretive, even despotic. In this way she has set her face against the energy and originality of the vote to Leave. By describing the arrival of Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish parliaments as merely a peculiar ‘devolved governance’, she hints at a famous (for those in the know) dismissive phrase of Enoch Powell: ‘Power devolved is power retained’. As for coalition, we will have no more of such ‘little histories’! She is taking the UK out of the EU to preserve the Westminster system, with national parliaments reduced to local government, human rights removed from being constitutional claims, less freedom of information, the Lords put back in their place – this is Britain in 1972 when Theresa May was sixteen, and the British were good subjects who still admired our leaders.

May’s close advisers describe their approach as a ‘new model conservatism’, with overtones of Oliver Cromwell’s New Model Army. But he led a civil war that oversaw a regicide – not just the summary firing of a chancellor of the exchequer out of the back door of Downing Street. If Brexit was an uprising against the governing ‘political elite’ and their international friends, it was also a challenge to the way policies are imposed. ‘Take back control’ has thrilling, democratic implications if it means that people themselves start to take control. Brexit was not just about unfair policies, it was also directed at who made decisions and how policy is decided. Freedom from the European Union should have delivered the country on a more democratic course, replacing the hyper-centralisation of Whitehall and winner-takes-all elected dictatorship as well. Instead, re-imposing them will crush the vitality and democracy out of Brexit.

The positive energy of the Leave campaign was rooted in a spirit of rebellion that goes back to the seventeenth century. For the most part deeply comatose, it was always latent – and has been awakened. This time a modern Cromwell, even in the guise of Theresa Britannia, is unlikely to triumph.

For three reasons. First, Brexit is just beginning. After the Welsh assembly was endorsed by its sliver of a majority, Ron Davies, the then Welsh Labour leader, said ‘devolution is a process not an event’. What was true for Wales is far more so for Brexit. There is nothing ‘final’ about it, nor should there be. Brexit demands, as May herself says, people ‘coming together’ and the ‘country uniting’. This won’t happen when people are told they must unite and are given ultimatums about what is final. For Brexit to work as a process, it needs to grow and gather support, not be dictated. The example of Thatcher’s firmness and success fills the air thanks to the tabloids. Thatcher’s belligerent leadership worked only when she also released individual capacities, opened markets whether for houses or on the trading floors, and empowered individualism. When she sought to insist on an unfair poll tax designed to drive voters from the electoral register, and began to regiment the population, she was broken.

Second, Brexit is an old people’s home. What does trading as ‘Global Britain’ mean to a young person who wants to live in Berlin, Paris, Rome, Madrid or Lisbon? The YouGov survey of 5,500 voters on the day of the referendum shows the 18–24 age group backing Remain by 71 per cent. It was pensioners over sixty-five who supported Leave by 64 per cent, and won the day. Among the under-25s, young women voted by an overwhelming 80 per cent to 20 per cent for Europe. The future is becoming more feminine, more open and cooperative with other peoples and cultures, less obsessed with absolute sovereignty. The ineluctable demography of the new networked nationalism will undo Brexit absolutism.

Third, the force of Brexit is nativist and the natives who voted for it are the English, in rebellion against being treated as natives in the only way they can rebel – so far. The UK referendum on membership of the EU was not about the economics, as the Remain side ruefully acknowledged after the vote. It was about what kind of country we want to be. Does England therefore have the right to decide what kind of countries Scotland and Ireland want to be?

The prime minister is caught up in a profound, unstoppable, reimagining of what the United Kingdom means, even as she insists that she will not accept such reimagining. Her idea of a Global Britain more interested in trade with Uruguay than with Umbria is a spectral hope in the swirling fortunes of a world on fire, while young women across all of Britain’s nations look the other way. In the first part of this book, I showed how Brexit and Trump were driven by a desire to make a jailbreak out of the prison of meaningless language, elite gobbledegook and an imposed powerlessness and inequity while those in charge do marvellously well. The breakout was overdue. The tragedy of the mass escapes of 2016 is that they were led by political mafiosi and scoundrels cashing in on the discontent. Apply this rough-and-ready description of the positive spirit of Brexit Britain today, as May pipes the UK out of the EU. Unlike Trump, who is an experienced godfather and campaigned single-mindedly, the Brexit Cosa Nostra are all over the place. Boris Johnson, Andrea Leadsom, Nigel Farage, Daniel Hannan, Michael Gove – this is a hopeless bunch of ne’er-do-wells who can barely shoot straight even when they aim at each other. Thanks to their incitement, the English breached the walls of elite language, unaccountable Euro-sovereignty and the unctuous hypocrisy of globalist regulation – only to find themselves without a reliable guide to sustain their liberation.

Then, striding purposefully from the home office of the prison itself, came sub-commander May. She told them: I understand you. You are right. The conditions were atrocious. The people in charge claimed to belong to the whole world and belonged nowhere. I applaud your resolve to be rid of them. Also, there has been discrimination. Relations with other prisons have been conducted only to the benefit of the owner (for the prison is privatised). From now on I am your commander. I will speak in plain language. We will take back control, with myself in charge. Close the gates and get back to your cells, or we will lose our precious union. No one can escape to declare their national cell-block independent. We are one prison again.

The United Kingdom as a prison of nations? I think not.

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How NHS staff are fighting back against the ‘hostile environment’

With typical hyperbole and disregard for accuracy, the Daily Mail published a headline earlier this month claiming that MPs had ‘caved in’ to ‘left-wing doctors and scrap[ped] plans to stop ‘health tourists’ coming to Britain for treatment they're not entitled to’. Making no reference to the well documented harm caused by the policy, the piece focused instead on the alleged cost of so called ‘health tourists’ to the NHS, repeating a favourite refrain of a Government and media adept at directing the anger at enforced austerity towards migrants.

No mention either of Elfreda Spencer, Nasar Khan, Albert Thompson, Kelemua Mulat, Esayas Welday, Pauline Pennant, Beatrice, Saloum, Bhavani Espathi, and countless others who have died after being denied care or made destitute after receiving huge medical bills. Meanwhile the ‘left-wing doctors’ the Daily Mail reviles are in fact supported by the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges, who recently called for the policy to be scrapped. This follows evidence from the British Medical Association, the Equality and Human Rights Commission and Doctors of the World that demonstrate the harm these policies are causing, and calling into question the shaky economic rationale behind the policy.

Despite the claims made by the Daily Mail, the policy of charging migrants for NHS care has not been reversed. The article mentions the pausing of a pilot scheme run in 18 Trusts that required people to bring 2 forms of ID to their outpatient appointment. No evaluation of these pilots is available, though we know through freedom of information requests that of 8900 people checked only 50 were found to be eligible for charging. This method of ID checking is only one part of the Hostile Environment’s byzantine system of ID checks, pre attendance forms, and data sharing; an entire infrastructure of immigration enforcement that threatens the lives of migrants and the foundational principles of the NHS.

Charging Migrants in the NHS

Behind the ID checks and upfront charging sit dedicated teams of overseas visitor managers whose job it is to find and charge patients. The majority of those bearing the brunt of the policy are not so-called ‘health tourists’ but undocumented migrants, refused asylum seekers, and others caught up in the UK’s dysfunctional and discriminatory immigration system.

These are the people who are least likely to be able to pay and the most likely to be in insecure or low paid work. So instead of recovering costs, the policy in reality results in NHS Trusts selling patient debt to bailiffs who go on to harass people who cannot pay, causing considerable distress to destitute families. Others find themselves trapped outside of the NHS altogether, either too afraid to seek care when they need it, or denied treatment because they can not afford to pay upfront.

The Hostile Environment also precipitates a culture shift within the NHS, forcing staff to be complicit in policing and excluding patients and institutionalising racism until it becomes a normalised part of the daily routine. Entitlement, not need, is increasingly becoming the first thing people consider when someone seeks care; chip and pin machines are now a common sight on wards, and doctors are under pressure to consign their patients to untreated pain and even death if they don’t have the right documentation. Take the case of Salom, an anti-FGM campaigner who had been living undocumented in the UK for over 10 years. Salom was found to have 2 brain tumors and lung cancer after collapsing in the street, however he was denied treatment because he had not been able to regularise his residency in the UK. Even in the days leading up to his death he remained terrified he would be asked to leave the hospital because he could not pay.

Ominously, these policies continue to lay the groundwork for increasing privatisation of the NHS, legitimising the denial of care on the basis of arbitrary status and personal wealth.

But the Daily Mail is right about one thing – a nationwide campaign is now mobilising against these cruel policies. Under the banner of ‘Patients not Passports’, a broad and growing coalition of healthcare workers, trade unions, faith institutions, anti-austerity campaigns, migrant groups and racial justice organisations are uniting to stand up for migrants and the principle of equal treatment in the NHS. More than 400 of them met at the end of April to launch the campaign in London, reflecting the strong views of thousands of others now organising around the country.

Resisting the Hostile Environment

Every day, in wards up and down the country, doctors, nurses and administrative staff are asked to make impossible decisions about whether or not to treat ill patients. Those refusing to comply have been threatened by their Trusts, accused of ‘fraud’ and ‘bringing the Trust into disrepute’.

It is in the NHS – the country’s biggest employer – that the political values of the far right are being enacted in practical terms, finding their way into the most basic clinical decisions healthcare workers are asked to make. This is supported by an entire propaganda infrastructure, with official Government statements, posters in hospitals and staff training all reinforcing racial stereotypes (and also criminalising difference through other programmes, like PREVENT).

Given the harm to patients, the threat to the NHS, and the use of austerity to progress far right policies, what can we do – as healthcare workers, as communities, and as patients – to fight back against the the racist Hostile Environment?

The success of such a campaign will depend on mobilising everybody, from the management of NHS Trusts to patient engagement groups, from the staff working on the front line to the Royal Colleges that represent them, to engage with and advance opposition to these policies. We must force these institutions to break their silence. Those that work in the sector must be supported to challenge these policies in the ways that are possible for them in their workplace.

The hostile environment policy takes aim at one of the few institutions representing progressive political ideals, and is a direct attack on the equality and class solidarity the NHS embodies. This is why this fight is so pivotal in the struggle against institutional racism and the far right in Britain today – and the work of resisting these policies must include everybody.

Migrants Organise, Medact, and Docs Not Cops have been supporting groups to put these principles into action, and there are now growing campaigns in Liverpool, Bristol, Birmingham, Brighton, Cambridge, Glasgow, Swansea, and in four London Trusts. In Barts Health Trust in east London, healthcare workers have been collaborating with campaigners from Keep Our NHS Public and North East London Save Our NHS who have been pushing the Trust to stop charging patients. This has led to a picket at the Trusts AGM, a march from East London Mosque to deliver the community’s demands to the Trust Executive, and an inspiring meeting of healthcare workers sharing their experiences of being forced to charge patients under these regulations.

In Liverpool, hundreds of people have signed an open statement demanding their Trust stand up for the rights of patients and call on the Government to stop charging for NHS care. In Birmingham campaigns are building a powerful coalition of healthcare workers, community campaigners, faith groups, and people affected by charging, a campaign that emerged from the tragic death of community member Nasar Ullah Khan. Campaigners working in Homerton Trust in east London have been using the Local Council’s Health Scrutiny Board to pressure the Trust to stop using threatening pre-attendance forms that demand patients provide ID and consent to their data being given to the Home Office.

These campaigns are growing rapidly, now supported by the Patients Not Passports toolkit that contains the basic principles for how to advocate for patients, and how to create a vibrant, dynamic movement against the Hostile Environment in the NHS. The toolkit is accompanied by Medact’s briefing on charging – Patients Not Passports: Challenging healthcare charging in the NHS. It explains where NHS charging came from, deconstructs the racialised myths the Government have used to justify it, and provides a comprehensive evidence base to support opposition to the policy.

The campaign is open to all, and all will be needed in order to succeed. Here are some ways you can get involved.

1) Organise – people across the country are organising locally to call on Trusts to resist the charges. We can support you step by step to start a campaign where you are. For more information email [email protected] or [email protected]. There might already be a campaign where you are, see below!

2) Share the Toolkit and the Briefing – These tools are made for everyone, help us get them out there by sharing them with your friends, colleagues, and on social media using #PatientsNotPassports

3) Stay in touch

● Email Docs Not Cops to join their mailing list

● Sign up to Medact’s Patients Not Passports mailing list to get updates about the campaigns happening around the country.

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● Contact Migrants Organise – email Akram on [email protected]

● Follow @MigrantsOrg @Medact & @DocsNotCops on Twitter to stay in touch.

“Solidarity is in the air”: Meet the bold, young women challenging Europe’s far right across borders

“We must open our eyes and act before we find ourselves living in a fascist Europe”, the Croatian feminist activist Marinella Matejčić told me. We met in late March in front of an old, local church in Verona, Italy – the day after Matteo Salvini, the leader of the far-right Lega party, spoke at a major gathering in the city of US, Russian and other ultra-conservative activists, aristocrats, and their growing list of political allies.

Matejčić was dressed in the distinctive red cloak and white bonnet of Margaret Atwood’s dystopian Handmaid’s Tale characters; that novel depicts the lives of women as reproductive slaves in a totalitarian state. Italian far right activists were rumoured to be inside the church, attending a Latin mass. Outside, Matejčić and eight other women lined up along the wall and bowed their heads.

It was a silent – provocative – protest. Atwood’s novel is a “too accurate presentation of the times that we live in”, Matejčić said afterwards. They wanted “to highlight the clerical-fascism” that appears to be alive and kicking across Europe, she told me – from far right attempts to ban abortion in Poland to the rise of the Vox party in Spain that opposes ‘feminazis’ and laws against gender-based violence.

As people exited the church, some stopped to jeer at the Croatian handmaids. “At last, a woman who keeps quiet!" one exclaimed. Others prayed ‘for their souls’. The air in the narrow road was tense – Verona, famous to tourists internationally as the ‘city of love’, Romeo and Juliet, is also a hotbed of local far-right and fascist activity, including street violence and threats against women, LGBTIQ people and migrants.

I had a deep sense of paranoia that something nasty was about to kick-off outside that church – though it did not. “We were surrounded by some faces full of hate”, another Croatian handmaid, Karmela Segvic, told me. And yet, she insisted: “we know we are not wrong, we are just fighting for our rights”.

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In Croatia, Segvic has been involved in feminist movements for several years, working with survivors of domestic violence. This, she says, has made her realise the danger posed by "fundamentalists and politicians" who are "using their power and money to retrieve the rights we already gained". She told me: "I just want to be free".

After marching through the city centre, the handmaids stripped their costumes off, as if superwomen. I felt drawn to these bold women. They were gleeful, hugging each other and dancing in the streets after finishing their protest.

But, as we turned a corner, I noticed two men following them. I had seen them outside the church, too. Were they undercover police, or local fascists? I followed them as well, with a video camera, until the activists had made it safely to their car.

The World Congress of Families (WCF) network has been meeting internationally for years but this year’s event in Verona was particularly high-profile. Numerous far-right politicians from Italy spoke along with Princess Gloria of Thurn and Taxis – a key ally of Pope Francis’s critics in Rome and a friend of Steve Bannon. Representatives of German and French far right parties were also reportedly there.

Outside the event, a local leader of the Italian neo-fascist Forza Nuova party gave a press conference, calling for a referendum against abortion. At a march through the city, banners were visible proclaiming “God, Nation, Family” – a classic fascist slogan from the Mussolini era. But there were also mass counter-protests – with 30,000 people joining street demonstrations for women’s and LGBTIQ rights.

I went to Verona from the UK, where I work for the global independent media website openDemocracy that is tracking the transnational backlash against women’s and LGBTIQ rights. Recently, we revealed that a dozen US Christian right groups poured $50million of ‘dark money’ into Europe over the last decade, pushing similar ‘traditional values’ agendas as the region’s rising far right movements.

While my colleagues went undercover inside the WCF meeting, I followed the counter-protests – documenting the historic mobilisation against this ultra-conservative network and the vision of ‘ideal’ societies they promote: where women don’t have access to safe, legal abortion, and where the married heterosexual couple who have many children is revered above all others.

Women had travelled to Verona by car, train and plane from Poland, Germany, Spain, Switzerland, the UK, Belarus, Argentina, and from all over Italy to join these protests. This far-right surge is “the most dangerous threat to modern democracies”, said Matejčić, one of several Croatian activists I spoke to.

Segvic, who came with her from Zagreb, talked with pride about making their handmaid’s outfits themselves, and carrying them with excitement and care across the border from Croatia to Italy. “That was our way of saying that we all have the same problems in Europe and that we are together”, she told me.

It resonated strongly with me – reminding me of experiences I’ve had with the Sisters Uncut feminist direct action group in London. I know well the strength and creativity of women and LGBTIQ people forming communities of resistance against facisms, fundamentalisms and state violence. I know the joy that comes with standing up to those in power – along with the danger, the adrenaline and the fire in the belly.

At openDemocracy, I had worked on an investigation into this ultra-conservative network, compiling and analysing a list of the more than 700 speakers on the programmes for WCF events since 2004. We found a sharp increase in European far right politicians speaking at these gatherings over the last few years in particular.

At a recent Sisters Uncut meeting in London, dedicated to political education, I was also inspired by Akwugo Emejulu, professor of sociology at the University of Warwick, who urged us to record our own activism, and take control of our own stories of resistance, too often excluded by mainstream accounts.

Ahead of the WCF meeting in Verona, the Italian feminist movement Non Una Di Meno (NUDM) issued an urgent call for international solidarity – asking activists from across Europe join their protest against the congress and its opposition to abortion rights, sex education, same sex marriage, contraception, and even divorce.

Weeks before arriving in Verona, I connected online with other young women planning to attend the protest from across Europe. Several recorded short video diary entries along their journeys, and sent them to me. On route, my phone wouldn’t stop beeping with enthusiastic messages of camaraderie from these women.

“An outpost of hate”

It was “no surprise” that Verona hosted the WCF, an Italian feminist told me, when I arrived. She spoke to me on condition of anonymity citing fears of a backlash from local fascist groups or the Italian police, describing the city as an “outpost of hate”.

Verona has long been a landmark for Catholic traditionalist groups which have close ties to the far right and local politicians. Author and activist, Emanuele Del Medico, warns that the “Veronification” of Italian politics is also “absolutely replicable at European level”. Last year, Verona declared itself Italy’s first anti-abortion city.

The night before tens of thousands demonstrated on the streets against the WCF, and in support of women’s and LGBTIQ rights, a photo was circulated on social media of a racist, fascist group, roaming the streets of Verona, apparently aimed at international activists, with the threatening hashtag: #Dontwalkaroundverona.

Some activists sent me anxious messages and feared joining the protests the following day, despite having crossed Europe to join them.

Serah-Daisy Ulyatt from Sisters Uncut said that “as a woman of colour” in particular, she felt “demotivated, nervous and unsafe”. Though she'd participated in feminist protests in the UK for years, she described feeling "safe" and "at home" in these spaces in comparison, as she knew the context and laws and her own rights.

Though there was also light that pierced through this darkness. The night I arrived in Verona, I met Yuri Guaiana from the LGBTIQ rights group All Out, standing next to a huge projector reflecting messages embracing all families – rather than the WCF’s narrow definition of ‘traditional families’ – onto a medieval stone wall.

Guaiana warned that ultra-conservative groups connected to far right parties “already have access to power and there is certainly a risk that they will gain even more power in the upcoming European elections”. He said they wanted to “light up Verona” and highlight “that love is what makes a family and that all families matter!”

This emphasis – reclaiming the ‘city of love’ – was alive on the streets on the day of the protests, which felt like a joyous carnival, with loudspeakers blaring music, drums, dancing in the streets, costumes, bright colours, and banners and placards with the creative, multi-lingual slogans of feminists from across Europe.

At Sisters Uncut, we work to create safe spaces amidst state violence, for instance by occupying and reclaiming an empty women’s prison and a deserted council flat – and opening them up for community festivals. Similarly, the counter-WCF protest transformed the streets of far-right Verona into a safe community space.

A local activist with the Italian feminist movement NUDM said that, after these demonstrations, they feel “stronger” and “more united in the fight” against fascisms and Christian fundamentalism. “We are worried”, she told me, “but not scared”.

“Solidarity is in the air”

“Solidarity is in the air”, said Evgenia Ivanova from Belarus, who crossed several borders to join the feminists gathering in Verona.

Belarus has one of Europe’s most liberal laws on abortion, legalised in 1955. But now she fears that fundamentalist forces will mirror actions in other countries and try to restrict it. For this reason, she says, they've built links with their Polish sisters fighting for abortion rights, and want to do the same with other European countries.

The Italian feminists didn’t just organise a protest against the WCF – they took over the city for the whole weekend with talks, screenings and workshops for women’s and LGBTIQ rights. On the final day, they held an assembly of feminist movements.

I had never seen anything quite like this. Young women from Bosnia spoke about organising Sarajevo's first gay pride parade, for September 2019. Kurdish women described their gender revolution in Rojava against Islamic fundamentalism, along with their new hunger strikes to demand the release of political prisoners in Turkey.

From Argentina, activists reported how they organised their iconic ‘green wave’ protests for abortion rights – and how more than 3000 women left the Catholic church after their government’s decision not to liberalise the country’s abortion law.

I heard problems in the UK echoed throughout Europe and indeed the world – including similar attacks on sex education and abortion clinics. Across borders, far-right groups claim they defend women and blame migrants and men of colour for sexual violence. But rape is rife in every community – racism is not the answer.

Looking around the room, I saw a new generation of feminists forming a key frontline of resistance to these far right groups that would imprison women in their homes as traditional, subservient subjects and others beyond the borders of a fortress Europe. Some shared concrete plans and previews of calls for solidarity to come.

Zoe Fauquex, from Switzerland, told me that a nationwide ‘Women’s Strike’ is being organised after the European Parliament elections. Inspired by the NUDM Italian feminist movement, they want to invite many of the activists they met in Verona.

NUDM are also planning another cross-border gathering in Italy this fall. The rise of fascism and religious fundamentalism “isn’t just a problem in Europe”, one of the movement’s spokespeople told me. They’re thus looking to places like Brazil, India, Uganda and the US to hold an international feminist festival in 2020.

Segvic from Croatia concluded: “This is just the beginning”. Returning to Croatia, they organised their next protest: a ‘walk for freedom’ and reproductive rights which took place this weekend to counter the annual anti-abortion ‘walk for life’.

“This is just the beginning”

Arriving back in the UK energised and inspired by these women, I sat on a panel with Sisters Uncut the following week at SOAS university in London. I spoke about this new international resistance with other feminists from Women's Strike UK.

One month later, I chaired a panel with Sisters Uncut at the University of Cambridge. Former Black Panther and political prisoner Angela Davis was in the audience. The focus of the event was on strengthening cross-generational and transatlantic connections between women of colour organising against regressive forces.

In my years of activism in the UK, I've had few opportunities to meet other activists from other countries – and now in just a few months I've shared ideas, strategies and stories with women from across Europe and beyond.

I talked to Emejulu, from the University of Warwick about this. “These connections between feminists are not new – we always see such solidarity politics during times of crisis”, she said. But, amid “an emboldened far right and the attack on migrants' rights and women's rights, those solidaristic struggles… have now been reactivated”.

The professor, who studies the resistance of women of colour across Europe, described how activists are “building links with each other as their citizenship and humanity is questioned” and emphasised that “the cross-border resistances we are seeing is the result of the slow, painful but essential work of solidarity politics”.

She called it “heartening to see that anti-racist, anti-fascist and feminist activists are undertaking renewed efforts across Europe to counter white supremacy” – but said “we should not be surprised that women of colour are leading the fight against fascism as they are too often at the sharp end of fascist violence”.

Living in the UK, in the heart of empire and amid heated Brexit debates, often feels demoralising and exhausting. The relentless backlash against the rights of women, LGBTIQ people, migrants and people of colour happens every day and seeks to confine us within nation states and domestic settings.

But the truth is I’ve felt more powerful than ever in the past few months. A new generation of young women is breaking free. I know that collective resistance across borders based on love, solidarity and respect is the only way we’ll defeat the hateful rhetoric and policies of fascists and fundamentalists. And I know I’ll meet these bold young women again soon, as we continue to blossom into a global movement.

Why are so many Brexiteer politicians cosying up to this Armenian oligarch?

An Armenian oligarch who US diplomats once compared to Donald Trump has spent tens of thousands courting UK Eurosceptic politicians over the past two years.

Gagik Tsarukyan MP is one of Armenia’s richest men, and his political party occupies the second largest number of seats in parliament. He has no known assets or interests in the UK.

Today, openDemocracy can reveal that Tsarukyan’s political party has used a loophole in UK political donation legislation to host over a dozen Conservative Eurosceptics at his luxurious Multi Grand hotel and casino complex outside Armenia’s capital, Yerevan. These politicians are on the free-market, Eurosceptic wing of the party.

Tsarukyan’s guests, who have been profuse in their praise of the tycoon, include Lord Maude, a former cabinet minister now in the House of Lords, former MP James Wharton and Lord Callanan, currently minister of state at the Department for Exiting the European Union. Since leaving government, Maude and Wharton have taken up positions as Brexit advisers in the private sector.

Every year, UK politicians take millions of pounds’ worth of overseas trips paid for by foreign governments and non-governmental organisations.

“The fact that these anti-European politicians regularly enjoy the hospitality of one of Armenia’s richest men raises serious questions about their actions and motives back home,” says Labour MP Ben Bradshaw. “British politicians should not be for hire, and these individuals should come clean about their involvement in Armenia.”

A 2018 report by Transparency International UK highlights an exemption in the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act which permits donors without a strong link to the UK to pay registered individuals’ overseas travel expenses. This can lead to UK parliamentarians legitimising corrupt and repressive foreign governments via overseas trips, the organisation says.

Speaking to openDemocracy, Steve Goodrich, senior research officer at Transparency International UK, said: “It is prudent that parliamentarians undertake sufficient due diligence to ensure their status is not being used to burnish the reputations of those with something to hide.”

There is no evidence that the individuals entertained by Tsarukyan lobbied on his behalf or promoted his interests in the UK.

Apart from where stated, none of the politicians has responded for comment.

Tsarukyan’s ambition

Gagik Tsarukyan, 62, has built a business empire in Armenia comprising construction, mining, brandy and beer production, as well as hotels and casinos.

The Prosperous Armenia party, set up in 2004, is seen by many as a vehicle for Tsarukyan’s political ambitions. “From roughly 2012 to 2017, Tsarukyan was seen as the main political challenger to [president and later prime minister] Serzh Sargsyan,” says Emil Sanamyan, a fellow at the University of Southern California’s Institute of Armenian Studies.

Democratic politicians might well distance themselves from the Republican Party, the clan-like structure that ruled Armenia for nearly two decades: it is widely associated with authoritarian rule, nepotism, police violence, vote-buying and corruption. In May 2018, the party of government was forced to resign under pressure from protesters.

From 2007 to 2012, however, Tsarukyan partnered with the Republicans in government. A member of his extended family, and other political allies, hold political posts in his home province of Kotayk. In addition, there have been reports that Armenian journalists have been threatened and beaten allegedly by people connected to Tsarukyan.

“Tsarukyan is first and foremost a businessman,” says Anahit Shirinyan, an independent policy analyst. “He entered politics from business at a time when the merger of money and politics was going full-throttle in Armenia. This merger was meant to create a scheme of interdependency whereby businesses helped consolidate the ruling regime. In exchange, they were meant to be able to serve their own commercial interests through involvement in political decision-making.”

A former arm-wrestling champion, Tsarukyan is known for his bombastic and ‘man of the people’ style, and like other Armenian oligarchs sponsors numerous charitable projects.

And in a country where roughly a third of the population lives in poverty, Tsarukyan’s philanthropy makes many eager to win his favour.

In March 2017, Armenia’s Central Election Commission stated that Tsarukyan had violated election law by promising material assistance at the start of his campaign, and warned him against continuing to do so. During the 2018 Yerevan city election, police raided the party’s offices as part of a criminal investigation into vote-buying. Prosperous Armenia called this a “false denunciation” at the time.

“Tsarukyan was a potent force for two reasons,” says Emil Sanamyan, who names the tycoon as one of Armenia’s principal employers. “He accumulated genuine public popularity based on his philanthropy aka vote bribes, and Tsarukyan’s party was set up with support from Robert Kocharyan.”

Tsarukyan’s ties with Robert Kocharyan, independent Armenia’s powerful second president, are mentioned in US diplomatic cables leaked by WikiLeaks. “The Kocharyan relationship was seen as giving Tsarukyan access to the Kremlin that could have bested that of Serzh Sargsyan,” says Sanamyan.

Kocharyan, a friend of Russian president Vladimir Putin, is currently under investigation for his alleged role in the events of March 2008, Armenia’s ‘Bloody Sunday’, when at least eight civilians died in police clashes following presidential elections. A 2009 US embassy cable released by WikiLeaks stated that Kocharyan headed one of several “major political/economic pyramids” in the country.

In February this year, Tsarukyan called attempts to find connections between Prosperous Armenia and Kocharyan “speculation”, saying that he “no longer owed anything to anyone”.

Partnership at first sight

Since 2017, Prosperous Armenia has hosted 15 UK Conservative Eurosceptic members of the House of Lords, MPs and other politicians in Yerevan. With some exceptions noted in this article, Tsarukyan’s party paid for all travel and accommodation, according to the UK parliamentary Register of Members’ Interests.

In September 2017, for example, a delegation of eight Eurosceptic peers, MPs and other politicians, including Teesside mayor Ben Houchen, who recently invited Donald Trump to visit Redcar, travelled to the Armenian capital to attend a ‘Conservatism and Progress’ conference held at Tsarukyan’s hotel and casino complex outside the city.

Here, former MP James Wharton, ex-parliamentary under-secretary for international development – who introduced the EU referendum legislation into Parliament in 2013 – called Tsarukyan and his party “trusted colleagues”, presenting his host with a signed photograph of Margaret Thatcher as a gift.

openDemocracy could not confirm whether Wharton’s trip was paid for by Prosperous Armenia.

As reported by Tsarukyan’s TV channel, Lord Callanan, the future minister of state at the Department for Exiting the European Union, gave a speech in which he noted how popular Tsarukyan was among the Armenian people, and hoped the tycoon would win double the number of seats in the next election.

Baroness Pidding said that she had previously met Tsarukyan at Westminster Palace, where she realised they “would become partners the moment they met”.

Anna Shahnazarian, Armenian civic and ecological activist, says that it should "be outrageous for citizens of the UK that their elected officials' reputations are used in political games elsewhere in the world."

Scott Mann MP was another member of the visiting party. Responding via email, he stated that all his foreign travel is “recorded on my register of interests. I only take up offers to travel to other countries in parliamentary recess.”

Britain turns global

The ‘strong bond’, as Tsarukyan called it, between the Conservative Party and the oligarch extends to the former’s representatives in Europe.

The Alliance of Conservatives and Reformists in Europe (ACRE), the Conservative Party’s partners in Europe, has listed Tsarukyan’s Prosperous Armenia party as a member since 2015. Since its inception, ACRE has positioned itself as a leading voice of direct democracy and free-market economics in Europe.

In March 2017, Lord Callanan and Andrew Bingham MP joined an ACRE delegation to Yerevan for a conference held by Tsarukyan’s party. Callanan previously chaired the European Parliament’s European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) grouping, co-founded by the Conservative Party in 2009.

The visit was conducted by ACRE, and a Tsarukyan spokesperson stated at the time that the group’s visit was aimed at supporting the oligarch’s party ahead of Armenia’s 2017 parliamentary elections.

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The parliamentary Register of Members’ Interests does not record this trip for either Bingham or Callanan, and openDemocracy could not confirm who paid for it.

March 2017: Kentron TV programme on a Prosperous Armenia-ACRE conference held at Tsarukyan's Multi Grand Hotel in Yerevan. Here, ACRE and British politicians call on viewers to support Tsarukyan's party at the upcoming April 2017 elections.

The sentiment of support was affirmed by the British and ACRE politicians, whose conference speeches in support of the tycoon’s party appeared in a Tsarukyan campaign video shortly after.

In December 2017, former MP James Wharton returned to Yerevan for another conference. He joined Brexit architect Daniel Hannan MEP, who wants the UK to become an ‘offshore, low-tax, global free-trading entrepôt’ after leaving the EU, in Tsarukyan’s hotel and casino complex outside the Armenian capital.

Hosted by Prosperous Armenia and ACRE, the ‘Yerevan Summit’ witnessed ACRE’s annual general meeting, as well as a speech on “patriotism and conservatism” by Hannan.

This relationship has caused the European group some problems, however.

In 2017, Prosperous Armenia gave a €121,043 donation to ACRE. But following a 2018 European Parliament investigation into ACRE trips and expenses, the party had to return all but €12,000 of these funds to Prosperous Armenia: – donations over this amount are not permitted for groups taking European funds. Speaking to openDemocracy, ACRE stated that these funds were a membership fee, and said it has now returned the funds.

Commenting on ACRE’s relationship with Prosperous Armenia and its leader, Richard Milsom, the group’s chief executive, said:

“Our core mission is to promote the values of a free society – democracy, freedom of speech, press, property rights, rule of law. We facilitate these values and these relationships through a centralised network of politicians, to spread our message and build our movement. Countries on the border of Europe have many different problems, including geopolitical ones. Prosperous Armenia is an asset to the Alliance, we can help each other.”

The Queen’s speech

This sentiment was echoed in comments made by Lord Callanan to Tsarukyan’s TV channel during the oligarch’s visit to the UK in June 2017.

“We stand with Mr Tsarukyan and Prosperous Armenia, and are ready to support them in their initiatives,” Callanan said during Tsarukyan’s visit to the House of Lords. A few months later, Callanan became a minister of state at the Department for Exiting the European Union.

“The fact that our two parties agree on ideology is a guarantee of the success of our collaborations,” commented Callanan at the time.

Tsarukyan was in the UK in a trip facilitated by ACRE, according to the latter. In Armenia’s parliamentary elections two months earlier, Prosperous Armenia had been predicted to potentially beat the ruling Republican Party, but instead took just 31 seats out of 105.

In London, the oligarch attended the state opening of Parliament. As reported by his TV channel, Tsarukyan later went to dinner at the private, Conservative-linked Carlton Club as the guest of Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown MP, a vice-president of ACRE and member of Parliament’s hard-Brexit European Research Group.

Gagik Tsarukyan and Lord Martin Callanan. Source: Kentron TV

He was joined by, among others, James Wharton, Eleanor Laing MP, the deputy speaker of the House of Commons, and Richard Milsom, ACRE chief executive.

Anti-corruption drive

In May 2018, Armenians peacefully overthrew the corrupt Republican Party government through waves of protest across the country. And in the aftermath, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s new government has sought to take aim at the country’s entrenched oligarchic interests.

There have been high-profile investigations and arrests of old-regime officials and businessmen, including, most notably, Robert Kocharyan. While Tsarukyan may have supported protesters publicly in May 2018, observers aren’t convinced that this is enough to protect him from the country’s anti-oligarch drive in the long run.

“The government’s policy is to squeeze as many unpaid taxes from Armenia’s rich as they can,” says Emil Sanamyan, “and Tsarukyan is a prime target.”

“Following the Velvet Revolution, the inherent contradiction between Tsarukyan the politician and Tsarukyan who holds huge assets and commercial interests, even if he’s not formally running businesses, remains,” says analyst Anahit Shirinyan, “Naturally, this potential conflict of interests also casts a shadow over the political party he leads.”

Indeed, Tsarukyan has recently come under fire over allegations that, as an MP, he is not permitted to engage in business activity under Armenian law.

He responded to these concerns, including some raised by the parliamentary speaker, by stating that he has passed his property into trust management – and that he would resign his position as MP only when “the Armenia of his dreams is established”.

“As leader of the Prosperous Armenia party, I have served my authority in the country and outside of it to bring in as many investments to Armenia as possible,” he wrote in response to the speaker. “Many foreign investors met with me to get familiarised with the investment environment. Moreover, many investors see me as a reliable guarantor of their investments.”

According to Armenian investigative journalism website Hetq.am, Tsarukyan responds to concerns regarding his business by stating they “are aimed at targeting his reputation”.

In whose interest?

Late last October, four backbench Eurosceptic MPs – David Morris, Damien Moore, Matthew Offord and Sheryll Murray – followed the Conservatives’ well-worn trail to Yerevan for an international investment and trade round table hosted by Tsarukyan at his Multi Grand hotel and casino complex. This roundtable was attended by the new prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan.

These MPs were joined by Afzal Amin, a former Conservative Party candidate for Dudley. Moore, Offord and Murray are all members of the European Research Group. The visit was broadcast on Kentron TV.

Six weeks later, just ahead of Armenia’s first parliamentary election since last year’s revolution, two Conservative peers – Lord Maude and Baroness Finn – made the trip to Yerevan.

According to the parliamentary Register of Members’ Interests, this trip was for discussions with Prosperous Armenia – and was, once again, sponsored by Tsarukyan’s party. Their visit was broadcast in a nine-minute segment on Tsarukyan’s channel.

The Conservative peers were joined by William Shawcross, the former head of the UK Charity Commission, and Afzal Amin.

“Lords and Lordesses [sic] from England, who wanted to make a contribution, came to visit me,” the oligarch commented to the press. “This Lord [Maude], who was a minister during Margaret Thatcher's time, wants to see how we organise.”

During this visit, Tsarukyan called for an “economic revolution” and pointed to the United Arab Emirates’ extensive tax breaks as an example for Armenia to follow.

Afzal Amin, Baroness Simone Finn, Gagik Tsarukyan, Francis Maude, William Shawcross. Source: Kentron TV

Anna Shahnazarian says that "it is outrageous that Tsarukyan, a local oligarch, invites foreign politicians and presents them as investment partners – for whom he, as a member of parliament, and his party, are willing to adopt laws. This kind of breach of democratic principles exposes the internationalisation of neoliberal politics."

Two months later, Prosperous Armenia signed a cooperation agreement with Russia’s ruling party, United Russia.

Room for change

“In Whose Interest?”, a 2018 report by Transparency International UK on how UK parliamentarians legitimise corrupt and repressive foreign governments via overseas trips, highlights an exemption in the UK Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act (2000).

This exemption permits donors without a strong link to the United Kingdom to pay registered individuals’ overseas travel expenses. For donations to individuals or parties over £500, donors must evidence a strong connection to the UK – but these controls do not cover foreign travel.

“Our research has found that corrupt and repressive regimes from across the globe have sought to buy friends in Westminster through all-expenses-paid trips,” says Steve Goodrich, author of the report. “MPs and peers are regularly offered international engagements from a wide range of hosts. To protect the independence of parliamentarians when they’re abroad, there should be greater controls on who can pay for their travel, as is currently the case for political donations.”

In order to mitigate against perceptions that foreign trips influence parliamentarians, Transparency International UK recommends the creation of a proscribed list of organisations that may not fund politicians’ travel.

Sarah Clarke, senior policy and communications officer at campaign group Unlock Democracy, commented: “The majority of the public think that the UK political system is rigged to advantage the rich and powerful. This is hardly a surprise when British politicians spend their time on trips paid for by international oligarchs to legitimise their political aspirations, while keeping the British public in the dark about the substance and consequence of those trips.”

openDemocracy contacted those who travelled on trips to Yerevan, but received no response except where stated.

Sams Martirosyan and Knar Khudoyan contributed reporting from Yerevan.

Inside science fiction’s compassionate revolution

The science fiction and fantasy genre, which concerns itself so frequently with distant stars and imaginary lands, has become a space in which the prominence of women, people of color, and LGBTQ people most closely mirrors real-world America.

That might surprise those who recently saw the field rocked by a right-wing movement that rebelled against an imaginary liberal bias in subject matter and the increasing diversity of the writers in its awards pool.

But the 2019 nominees for the genre’s prestigious Hugo Awards have been announced, and they are inarguably the most representationally progressive group of authors and creators in the history of the award.

The Hugos recognize excellence in 20 categories, but four of them—Best Novel, Best Novella, Best Novelette, and Best Short Story—are considered the highest honors given at the ceremony, which takes place annually at the World Science Fiction and Fantasy Convention. Of the 22 authors nominated in those categories in 2019, only two are cisgender men.

The six nominees for Best Novel are five women and one transgender man. Writers of Black, Asian, and Indigenous descent are represented throughout the ballot. The Best Long-Form Editor category is made up entirely of women, and also there are more women than men nominated for the Best Related Work category, which includes nonfiction about the field.

Just four years ago, two highly organized campaigns known as the Sad Puppies and Rabid Puppies successfully gamed the system to nominate a whiter, straighter, more male and more politically conservative slate of authors. That resulted in several categories being dominated by authors and works that Hugo voters found wholly unacceptable. Rather than choose from among the Puppies’ chosen candidates, voters took the dramatic step of refusing to issue an award to anyone in those categories at the 2015 convention.

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Some, including both lifelong WorldCon attendees and the Puppies themselves, believed taking that step would have disastrous long-term effects for the credibility of the Hugos.

“That’s so weird to me,” writer Alexandra Rowland said, “because I was there, and I was witnessing this incredible moment of love and community.”

The voters’ solidarity with marginalized creators, along with changes to the nomination and voting rules, led to significant progress. The Puppies tried to hijack the nominations for two more years before finally fading away. In 2018, almost every category of the Hugos were won by women, including N.K. Jemisin, who became the first person ever to win the Hugo for Best Novel three years in a row. Before Jemisin, no Black person of either gender had ever won the top award.

Then came this year’s historic collection of nominees, which are notable not just for the elevation of a more diverse field of storytellers, but for the specific type of story that many of them represent.

Rowland coined the term “hopepunk” on a whim in a 2017 Tumblr post, having no idea that it would catch on so strongly within the community. She defined it initially as “the opposite of grimdark,” referring to a popular dystopian subgenre characterized by nihilism, amorality, and a negative view of human nature. Hopepunk, in contrast, is optimistic about humanity and sees kindness as “an act of rebellion” against a power structure that benefits from people giving up on compassion.

In an essay for the Winter 2019 issue of The Stellar Beacon zine, Rowland expanded on hopepunk, emphasizing the resistance element. Unlike another subgenre dubbed “noblebright”—characterized by the belief that righteous heroes can and will prevail over wicked villains—hopepunk does not deny the inherent injustices of the real world. However, it also recognizes the potential for justice within humanity. Compassion and empathy are weapons in the eternal fight between good and evil within the human heart. Hopepunk acknowledges that that fight will never be won, but insists on fighting anyway, because, as Rowland wrote, “the fight itself is the point.”

In this sense, hopepunk is subtler and less rigid than other subgenres. “You can find it, or not find it, wherever you look,” Rowland said. In her mind, it has grown beyond the confines of genre altogether. “This isn’t something that we necessarily just have to keep to fiction,” she said. “This is something that we can embody and live up to in our day-to-day lives.”

The idea of hopepunk as an ideology has roots in the idea that humanity defines itself through storytelling, an idea that Rowland thinks about often and explores in works like her novel A Conspiracy of Truths, in which a storyteller accidentally wreaks havoc on an entire nation.

“We tell stories to model ways of behavior so that we can live in communities together and have civilization together as a cooperative thing,” she said. “I think that’s one of the reasons that hopepunk is something so many people are responding to with such hunger and eagerness, because this is the story that they’ve been lacking.”

If the 2019 Hugos are any indication, hopepunk is indeed on the rise. In addition to Rowland’s own nomination for her podcast, Be the Serpent, numerous works on the new ballot can be considered hopepunk.

The NBC television show The Good Place has been nominated twice for the second straight year. James S.A. Corey’s The Expanse was nominated for Best Series in 2017, and its television adaptation just received its second nomination. Janelle Monae’s short film Dirty Computer is about an android’s struggle for sexual freedom despite attempts to force her into programmed heterosexuality, while Becky Chambers, who writes philosophical science fiction about culture and compassion, is once again up for Best Novel for Record of a Spaceborn Few.

Several nominated writers participated in The Verge’s Better Worlds project, which published science fiction writers with hopeful themes, including Kelly Robson, Rivers Solomon, and Justina Ireland. Perhaps most interestingly, the fan fiction website Archive Of Our Own has been nominated, legitimizing a form of writing that has long been treated as an embarrassment, but which has been fertile ground for hopepunk fiction since before the term was coined to describe it.

“We’re getting better,” Rowland said. “This would not have happened five years ago, certainly not 10 or 15 years ago. As bad as the world seems, the arc of the universe bends toward justice.”

This article was first published in YES! Magazine.

European politics: the ‘hidden hand’ and the ‘inevitable wave’

In the lead-up to this week’s EU elections apocalyptic predictions of a right-populist ‘sweep’ have abounded in both the European and international press. The concerns are, to a degree, justified – right and farther-right parties will probably gain an important number of seats in this electoral contest across a number of EU states. What is not at all a given, however, is the extent or the ‘sweep’ of their gains, and whether such parties will be able to necessarily gain sufficient seats to form the most sizeable block in the European Parliament.

National polls have been quite ambiguous in their findings regarding any further gains for right-populist parties: in some cases confirming the existing electoral support for parties such as the Lega in Italy or the AfD in Germany, but not necessarily giving any indication of a momentous ‘surge’ to come. A comprehensive survey carried out by the European Council on Foreign Relations with YouGov of 14 key EU states also debunks the myth of an impending far-right ‘earthquake’, noting indeed that a very important proportion of the EU electorate is still undecided – up to 97 million European voters.[i]

As voting begins today in the Netherlands and the UK, we should be wary of writing off the electoral results to come as an ‘inevitable’ success of the right. One of the striking things about representations of the seeming ‘inevitability’ of the success of the right is a very particular sort of conspiratorial geopolitics, with an exaggerated focus on wider global forces that are driving not just European politics but also individual European citizens’ political choices. We need to be very aware of the workings of such conspiratorial imaginaries for they risk profoundly colouring our understandings not just of what might happen but also of what can happen: that is, they risk seriously undermining our appreciation of European citizens’ political agency, imagining them to be mere puppets of social media manipulation and sinister external forces.

These elections will be a battleground, yes, and one in which a variety of powerful actors have attempted to shape the political landscape, in both licit and illicit ways. The insidious influence of ‘dark money’ flows to European far-right groups and parties has been thoroughly documented in a number of recent OpenDemocracy investigations.[i]

In the Italian context specifically, investigative journalists following the money flows into the coffers of both the Lega as well as more extreme right organizations have similarly documented the staggering span of these funding networks, characterizing it as a ‘black internationale money laundering operation’.[ii] Through the use of both off-shore bank accounts as well as donations to ‘legitimate’ organizations, donors ranging from those with ties to US Christian-right organizations, to those linked to ultra-conservative forces in the Russian Orthodox Church, have been pouring money into a range of causes and groups. These funding flows have undoubtedly been instrumental in allowing such groups to gain further visibility and to further extend their political reach, promoting a wide range of conservative agendas across Europe, from violent anti-abortion and anti-LGBTIQ campaigns, to anti-migrant mobilization under the rubric of ‘redeeming a Christian Europe under attack’.[iii]

But I believe we need to be more careful in analyzing the potential effects of such external support on the conduct of European politics – just as we have to be more careful in assessing the impact of the (by now blatant) manipulation of social media, also often by actors and interests from outside of the EU. I am in no way suggesting that these effects are unimportant. But while recognizing their portent, we cannot – and should not – assume they will be the guiding determinant of Europeans’ political choices.

In particular, we must be more critical of the sort of geopolitical imaginary such understandings evoke: that of a Europe and Europeans entirely at the mercy of the ‘hidden hand’ of actors plotting to undermine democratic politics. Conspiratorial understandings are of course nothing new in European politics, emerging with full force at times of political uncertainty: such as in the period between the two world wars, at the demise of the Cold War order in the early 1990s, or in today’s moment of ‘geopolitical vertigo’.

In such moments of uncertainty, it is highly tempting to turn to a simple mapping of the ‘bad guys’ and the ‘good guys’, conveying with broad brush-strokes the ‘hidden forces’ to blame for the current condition – whether of economic distress or political uncertainty. Such a simple mapping is highly seductive for it absolves us from engaging with the much more complex workings of economic, political, but also political identity-making processes. In the current moment, it risks absolving us from seriously and carefully engaging with some of the very real reasons for the ‘European crisis’ – both ‘internal’ as well as ‘external’.

A perfect example of this is the mediatic obsession with Steve Bannon’s supposed guiding hand in orchestrating a trans-European far-right coalition in the lead-up to these elections. The imagination of Bannon’s purported role has all the elements of conspiratorial geopolitics: an ‘evil mastermind’, secret meetings in a mediaeval monastery, an extensive international network of funders stretching from US Christian groups to Russian oligarchs with ties to the Russian Orthodox Church.[i] If it all sounds like a bad cinematic rendition of an Umberto Eco novel, it is perhaps because we should take it as precisely that, remembering that before Bannon’s very short-lived stint as Trump’s campaign advisor, he was a (failed) movie producer of B-rate political documentaries.[ii] Bannon’s function as a ‘facilitator’ of far-right politics should be taken for what a variety of investigations in Italy have shown it to be: as someone very able at bringing together a range of funders, drawing on his US but also Russian connections. This is far from being the intellectual godfather of a new right revival: more appropriately, its financial go-between.

Money of course matters, as does the additional visibility that an able spin-doctor like Bannon can generate. But let us understand his function in European politics for what it is, and stop providing him with further legitimation.

The scandal that brought down the Austrian far-right FPO party just slightly over a week before the elections is another relevant example of the perils of focusing on an external ‘hidden hand’. When a secret video emerged showing the leader of the FPO H.C. Strache offering to sell-off an Austrian newspaper and provide privileged access to a variety of other state assets to the supposed ‘niece’ of a Russian oligarch, the immediate media attention focused on the ‘whodunnit’ question, weaving fanciful stories of international intrigue involving real and fake oligarchs and the secret services of various countries. The questions to be asked, however, should have centred on what the videotaped conversations revealed about the (sorry) state of politics and political elites in Europe itself, and why European voters were willing to give people like Strache – or Le Pen, or Salvini – their vote, since all three have been the subject of financial investigations for quite some time.

Although it may sometimes offer us blockbuster moments, it is very dangerous to see electoral politics through a cinematic lens. Focusing on sinister figures that manipulate the political process is politically debilitating, presuming a priori that it is these forces that will determine the course of events. What is more, it also absolves progressive forces in Europe from fully engaging with the real causes of European citizens’ malaise. Let’s start with these elections, abandoning any conspiracies at the door, and focusing first of all on how to address the really-existing weaknesses and ambiguities of our own democracies.

[1] https://www.ecfr.eu/specials/what_europeans_really_want_five_myths_debunked

[2] See, among others: https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/dark-money-investigations/

[3] See the investigation by Paolo Biondani and Francesca Sironi, ‘Dalla Russia Con La Croce’, L’Espresso, March 24, 2019.

[4] As I noted in a previous commentary on the forces brought together in Italy for the World Congress of Families in March 2019:

[5] See the report by Giovanni Tizian, ‘L’oligarca di Dio e i soldi per la Lega’, L’Espresso, March 24, 2019.

[6] It is striking that only the Catholic press seems not to have bought into Bannon’s self-representation as ‘political mastermind’, referring to him simply as ‘the American film producer’ – see Avvenire, December 30, 2018. Archbishop Jean-Claude Hollerich, the head president of the Commission of the European Bishops Conferences of the European Union, also neatly dismissed Bannon’s role as ‘a priest of populism’ in his address to European congregations ahead of the elections: someone who ‘evokes a false pseudo-religious and pseudo-mystical world’ in order to help European populists ‘stave off real problems by organizing dances around a golden calf’ – https://www.laciviltacattolica.it/articolo/verso-le-elezioni-europee/

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Remainers: don't use our investigations as an excuse

Imagining conspiracies

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Why Greta Thunberg's leadership of the environmental movement is so ironic

If you follow the news, you must have seen her face. Awkwardly serious and surprisingly mature in speech, 16 year old Greta Thunberg from Sweden is currently one of the hottest names in global politics. Thunberg has been making headlines since 2018 when she first ditched school in order to protest against climate change. She has inspired thousands of people to act with her, collecting numerous accolades for her courageous attitude and countless public appearances.

In the midst of all this attention, however, most people have failed to recognise the irony of Thunberg’s position: her-self-declared autism may be both a consequence of pollution and a cause of her single-minded focus on climate injustice. No wonder she’s now using the greatest ‘gifts’ she unwittingly received in order to fight back.

Thunberg describes herself as a “climate activist with Aspergers.” According to her, this condition is the reason she is able to focus so deeply on the ecological crisis and be a more effective campaigner. This makes perfect sense. According to the National Autistic Society, people with Aspergers often have a tendency towards repetitive patterns of behaviour and a single-minded pursuit of interests. Thunberg’s brain may therefore be wired towards constant action and extraordinary focus, so it is perfectly suited for a tireless fight against global inaction on climate change. “It’s either you are sustainable or not — you can’t be a little bit sustainable” as she puts it. For her, things are as simple as they sound.

What’s not so simple are the underlying connections between environmental factors and our mental and physical health. Air pollution and an excessive exposure to toxins are often found to be a cause of brain deterioration and autistic disorders in children. This happens because inhaled pollutants can be transferred from the mother to the fetus during pregnancy, exposing children to harmful chemicals during a critical time in the development of the brain. Relying primarily on U.S. data, more than a half a dozen studies have already documented this connection through research that found a positive correlation between exposure to air pollution in utero or during the first years of life, and a heightened risk of autism.

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According to the World Health Organisation, nine out of every ten people, including children, breathe toxic air daily. This means that almost every child currently living on the planet or in their mother’s womb is at risk. But air pollution is just one factor in determining the overall toxicity of the environment. In addition, toxic chemicals are added to pretty much everything we use, including food, household items, personal care and beauty products, toys, furniture and clothing. These chemicals can easily enter the human body through inhalation, orally or through our skin, attacking our immune systems and ultimately wreaking havoc on our health. Children are most vulnerable to these effects because their immunity is usually weaker than that of an adult. This is confirmed in numerous studies that link prenatal exposure to man-made chemicals with an increased risk of Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), less optimal long-term memory in adolescents and lower intelligence levels in children.

The levels of toxicity in our environments are currently unprecedented. In the US alone, it is estimated that approximately 27 trillion pounds of chemicals are produced or imported per year. This amounts to 226 pounds (102.5 kg) of chemicals per person per day. What’s particularly worrying is that very few of these chemicals have ever been tested for safety. The 1976 Toxic Substances Control Act requires that chemical substances in the US be tested for any ill effects before approval only if evidence of potential harm already exists. This is seldom the case for new chemicals, and in reality, about 90 percent of the new compounds are approved without restrictions. ‘We don’t know what we don’t know’ as the saying goes, and that is precisely the problem, especially because the ultimate burden of testing is therefore left to us and our health.

At the same time, there is increasing evidence that an overexposure to toxins has highly detrimental effects on human health. Toxicity has been linked to an increasing range of diseases including cancer, digestive distress and mental health problems. As an example, phthalates that are usually found in food packaging, shower curtains, detergents, shampoos and nail polish have been linked with fertility issues, neurological disorders and cancer. Another common chemical compound found in furniture foams, mattresses, carpets and commercial aircraft – flame retardants – has been found to disrupt hormones and significantly affect women’s reproductive health. This is especially acute among flight attendants who are the most exposed to flame retardants from airplane materials, and who have been found to have higher rates of cervical, thyroid, breast and gastrointestinal cancers.

Hence, the toxicity of the environment is a hugely problematic issue which has significant effects on everyone’s health, and even on our ability to reproduce. However, the current environmental debate focuses predominantly on the results of CO2 emissions, rising sea levels and animal species extinction. These concerns are absolutely valid and need to be acted on immediately. But in reality, they’re just the tip of the iceberg. While the ecological crisis is now scientifically confirmed, the public health crisis with which it’s associated has received much less attention. In 1965, only 4% of Americans had a chronic disease. Today, 46% of American children have one, while the incidence of autism in the US has skyrocketed from one in five thousand people in the 1970s to one in 48 today.

Despite these horrifying statistics, the links between health and the environment are often ignored or sidelined in environmental activism and public policy. Even the Green New Deal agenda, led by Alexandria Ocasio- Cortez in the US and its sister programmes in Europe, lack any deep consideration of the deteriorating health of our populations and its connection to the ecological crisis. That connection is not magic, it’s common sense. According to the latest research in microbiology, only 43% of the human body is made up of human cells. The rest is made up by tiny organisms such as microbes, bacteria, viruses and fungi. Humans are not separate from their environments – those environments are lodged deep inside us.

The environmental question is about the present as much as the future. It concerns our daily wellbeing as well as our long-term health, the dignity of human life and our ultimate survival as a species. It impacts on everyone currently living on planet earth and anyone who is yet to arrive here. Today, we are not even able to guarantee fair access to clean air to anyone born on this planet, whether in high- or lower-income countries. This is precisely what Thunberg’s call not to steal her and all our futures is all about – and the reality we all need to wake up to.

Facebook’s new currency is an attempt to create a platform we never leave

On the surface, the announcement that Facebook plans to launch a new ‘GlobalCoin’ currency in 2020 is just another milestone in the ongoing expansion of the social media behemoth. But beyond the obvious opportunities that it may offer, the announcement reveals something else about where these platforms are heading.

The aim of the new currency is not simply to give Facebook a stake in the troubled but expanding crypto-currencies market. It is much more likely that GlobalCoin will be part of what is sometimes referred to as ‘social commerce’. Social commerce seeks to enable purchasing to happen directly on a social media platform, without the need to actually leave that platform. As well as targeted advertising and other content, this means that we would also be presented with buying options and possibilities for immediate transactions.

According to the GlobalWebIndex report on social media trends, interest in being able to purchase directly through promoted content on social media stands at only around 12%. Privacy was inevitably raised as one key concern. Despite this survey result, global trends seem to indicate the expansion of social commerce. Further transformations in the technology are also likely to impact upon such reservations. Indeed, Facebook having its own currency is likely to smooth the expansion of social commerce by tackling issues around trust and also by making it more convenient for purchasing to stay within its realms.

In China the social media platform WeChat, which has over one billion active users, incorporates a range of functions including an online payment system, and already hosts widely-used social commerce facilities. Not only can you purchase directly from other retailers through the WeChat platform, it can also be used to make purchases offline. The social commerce model is much more established on WeChat, and you have to wonder if this is becoming an archetypal model for other social media platforms. WeChat’s variety of functions and purchasing options mean that while you don’t leave it when online, it is also becoming a much more active part of what we used to think of as being offline spaces. When it comes to creating a platform that comprehensively captures everyday life, including transactions as well as updates and interactions, WeChat has the edge.

With this global context in mind, I’d suggest that we should see the development of GlobalCoin in terms of the business model that underpins Facebook: its pursuit of ever more granular and expansive data about people and their lives, tastes, preferences, interactions and behaviours, with the overall objective of monetising that data. As well as generating revenues itself, if GlobalCoin becomes popular it will further Facebook’s ambitions in two respects.

First, the currency will allow Facebook to harvest data about transactions that would previously have occurred outside of its ever expanding walls, including those new transactions that will occur through social commerce. Second, it also means that people will step outside Facebook’s borders less often, and the result will be more and more trace data being captured.

In addition to this, as with WeChat, the possibilities will emerge for purchasing offline through the Facebook currency, opening up access to a whole ‘internet of things’ in Facebook’s ever growing data harvesting machine.

The ambition is to turn Facebook into a platform that people never need to leave, and to create the conditions under which Facebook is the internet for as many people as possible.

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There is nothing more effective in data analytics than a platform which captures everything about us. It allows for numerous and varied data sources to be combined to create insights, make predictions, expand profiles and infer preferences. The announcement of Facebook's currency should be seen in these terms.

The question to ask ourselves is: do we want to allow Facebook’s walls to continue to expand?

Why Ukraine’s new language law will have long-term consequences

If Russian democracy ends where Ukraine begins, as a popular saying goes, then Ukrainian democracy ends when the conversation about language begins. The “language issue” can make anyone hate each other and lead to additional friction in society.

Ukraine’s new “Law on Guaranteeing the Functioning of the Ukrainian Language as a State Language” emerged out of Draft Law 5670-D, one of four language laws registered in the Ukrainian parliament. All of these bills were drawn up in response to the declaration of the 2012 “Kivalov-Kolesnichenko Law” (also known as the “Law on the Basis of State Policy”) as unconstitutional. This law, drawn up under the Viktor Yanukovych regime, was developed to extend the rights of regional languages in Ukraine, but Ukraine’s opposition criticised it as part of a “Russification” drive.

Immediately after the victory of EuroMaidan in 2014, parliamentary deputies tried to revoke the “Kivalov-Kolesnichenko Law”, on 23 February. But acting president Oleksandr Turchynov decided not to sign off on parliament’s decision. The very attempt to revoke the law outraged people of very different political views. Two days after, members of the Lviv intelligentsia came out in defence of the Russian language. Parliament’s decision was interpreted as an attack on the rights of Russian-speaking Ukrainians, and became yet another trigger for pro-Russian separatism in the east of the country.

In June 2014, newly elected president Petro Poroshenko called parliament’s actions a mistake. Having come to power on the idea of a “united country”, Poroshenko couldn’t permit himself to divide Ukrainian society any further. And in his inauguration speech he made a separate address to residents of Donetsk and Luhansk regions in Russian.

Five years later, Volodymyr Zelensky repeated this address to Russian speakers during his inauguration – and received several angry shouts from parliament in response. The times, it seems, have changed.

Army, faith, language

In the 2019 presidential elections, Poroshenko ran for a second term with the slogan “Army, faith, language”. Bill 5670-D was approved in its first reading on 4 October 2018. Next came the process of amendments (some 3,000 of them), and parliament passed the law in its second reading on 25 April 2019. By that time, the law was already useless in terms of helping Poroshenko at the ballot box – he’d lost the first round a few days before.

But the language law can still be of use to the former president at this year’s parliamentary elections. According to party representatives, the Petro Poroshenko Bloc is transforming itself into an ideological right-wing party. Revitalising the “language issue” could be very useful for them.

Indeed, a consolidation of Ukraine’s Russian-speaking electorate in response to this strategy could draw potential votes from Volodymyr Zelensky’s political party towards Opposition Bloc and other political groups that emerged from the Yanukovych-era Party of Regions. This wouldn’t be the first time that Petro Poroshenko acted in tandem with pro-Russian politicians to improve his own rating. During the recent presidential election, Ukrainian media which are friendly to Poroshenko actively promoted pro-Russian candidate Yuri Boiko – in order to push the “unpatriotic” (and beatable) candidate into the second round.

After the new language law was passed in parliament and signed into force by speaker Andriy Parubiy, it was not published on parliament’s website, despite the promises of Mykola Knyazhytsky, chairperson of the parliamentary committee on culture and spirituality. It was only published in full on 16 May in the parliamentary newspaper. The law comes into force on 16 July. Several of its provisions will be implemented later.

Not a word in Russian

The introduction to the law states that the “full functioning of Ukrainian on the entire territory of the state guarantees the preservation of the identity of the Ukrainian nation and strengthening of the unity of Ukraine”, and that “the Ukrainian language is a defining factor and main marker of identity of the Ukrainian nation”. The Ukrainian parliament also refers to Ukraine’s Constitution, and Article 10 says that the “state language in Ukraine is Ukrainian”. But that same article states that “the free development, use and defence of Russian and other languages of national minorities is guaranteed in Ukraine”.

According to the new law, the only state and official language in Ukraine is Ukrainian. It is to be used during the operation of duties of state power and local self-government. The law does not cover private interaction and religious rituals.

The first version of the law contained a point about the introduction of “language inspectors” – public officials who were to monitor the obligatory use of Ukrainian. But this norm has now been removed, while keeping the position of a public official with oversight over defence of Ukrainian.

These “inspectors” were removed following a negative reaction from society (for example, heated debates on social media). As Iryna Podolyak, one of the authors of the law, said: “Russian propaganda, which started frightening people with [language] inspectors, has won. Everyone immediately imagined an environmental inspector – who has to be bribed – or, perhaps, a [police] traffic inspector.”

Moreover, during the law’s second reading, parliament removed several other norms, such as those that concerned newspapers in foreign languages. For example, the first version of the law stated that every media resource in a foreign language should have a Ukrainian version. Thus, the Kyiv Post, an English-language publication, would have had to release a Ukrainian edition of its newspaper – and bear the financial costs. By the second reading, this provision had been removed. Now media are not obliged to publish a Ukrainian-language version if they publish in Crimean Tatar or any of the other official languages of the European Union. This compromise does not cover Russian.

A similar provision is applied to education, where one or more subjects can be taught in a European Union language, but not in Russian. You can only receive a pre-school or primary education in the language of a national minority (which Russian is).

It’s worth noting that the law states that Crimean Tatar language is the language of the native people of Crimea, but it doesn’t cover other languages that people speak in Ukraine – such as Russian, Romanian or Hungarian. Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó has already called this new law “unacceptable”. And the Ukrainian state will probably have to come to an agreement with the Hungarian or Romanian foreign ministries. Any outrage from the Russian state will be ignored.

Moreover, the new law regulates the use of language in Ukraine’s culture industry, and these norms will come into force in two years. For instance, you will only be able to use foreign languages in theatres in case of “artistic necessity”. The law does not explain who will define this “necessity” or how. Meanwhile, the number of films shown in cinemas that aren’t dubbed into Ukrainian cannot exceed 10%. The number of times that foreign films are shown in their original dubbing cannot exceed more than 10% of the cinema’s entire repertoire.

Everyone but Moscow

It will be possible to change some of the law’s problems via amendment later. But it’s impossible to change the message that the Ukrainian authorities have sent.

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“We tried to account for the opinion of all interested parties which adhere to the state’s policy. The only opinion that we weren’t going to account for is the opinion of Moscow. Let them study Russian,” said Petro Poroshenko in his parliamentary speech dedicated to the new law .

We can explain Poroshenko’s attitude to Russian language via his political ambitions. (After all, the outgoing president recently called himself a Russian speaker.) But what should Russian-speaking Ukrainians, who don’t consider themselves an ethnic minority, do? The time-bomb placed in this new law is the playing around with the following concept: if you’re a Ukrainian, that means you’re a Ukrainian speaker.

But that’s not how it works. This kind of rough division of Ukrainian citizens into “our people” and “the rest” is impermissible in a multi-ethnic state involved in a territorial conflict. By symbolically giving away Russian as a language, and with it – Russian-speaking Ukrainians, to Moscow, too many people are now faced with the prospect of not being counted as Ukrainians.

The new language law does not solve the issue of how Russian and Ukrainian co-exist as languages. Instead, it raises the problem to a new level. Any criticism of the law can be interpreting as “wrecking”. For example, immediately after the law was passed, parliamentary speaker Andriy Parubiy warned parliament that “those people who try to revise the language law, the law on decommunisation or the church, will soon feel the whole anger of the Ukrainian people.” Finding enemies among your own people will soon be a lot easier. And in light of the inevitable parliamentary elections this year, this law is good for everyone – that is, of course, apart from voters themselves.

Triple threat to transparency: a Brexit Story

The main institution which drove Britain out of the EU was the right-wing press. For decades, papers owned by oligarchs like Rupert Murdoch, Richard Desmond, and the Barclay brothers protected politicians that their journalists ought to have been holding to account, shifting the blame for their failures onto a convenient, fictionalised version of the European Union.

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Any discussion of propaganda and the European referendum has to start within that context, rooted in a history of lies told not as fake news or Facebook memes, but in so-called respectable national papers, by liars who were not hidden behind anonymous Twitter accounts, but who proudly paraded on the bylines of their articles.

The original Brexit liar was the Telegraph Brussels correspondent from 1989 to 1994. Already controversial when he was appointed – he’d been sacked by The Times – this propagandist for the British establishment used his role to distract people from the struggles of the Tory government of the time by inventing a string of stories about the European Union, creating, as one of his fellow Brussels correspondents would later say, “an entire newspaper genre: the Euromyth, a story that had a tiny element of truth at the outset but which was magnified so far beyond reality that by the time it reached the reader it was false.”

Over the next twenty-five years, his genre of Euromyth-making became a central feature of the oligarch-owned press in the UK – from The Sun and the Express to The Times and The Telegraph – warping the national understanding of the EU.

Sins of the state

Alongside Euromythology grew another kind of mythology, driven by the shared interests of the tabloids and the state: migrant-bashing. Though the seed had been sown long before 2008, the financial crisis brought with it a desperate need to find someone to blame who didn’t have the social power to answer back. And so, in 2010, the newly-elected Conservative government, in concert with the same right-wing press, brought the full weight of the state down onto people of colour and communities of migrants, describing their own policy agenda as having the goal of creating a ‘hostile environment’ for people who had come from other countries.

The policy had practical and devastating impacts on people living in the UK: black people were rounded up and sent back to the former colonies from which their parents had migrated a generation earlier, in what became known as the Windrush scandal; people whose British partners didn’t earn enough were deported; vans were sent around areas with high numbers of migrants and people of colour, telling those without the correct paperwork to “go home or face arrest”.

But this brutality had a second purpose: propaganda. It ramped up racism in the country, and then shifted blame for stagnant wages and public service cuts, a decomposing political system and the explosion of the banking system onto people of colour and migrants.

The architect of this hostile environment was the UK Home Secretary. In the manner of an old-school colonialist, she spoke softly but carried a big stick, slamming the power of the British state down like a sledgehammer onto communities of colour. Each thud she delivered added the legitimacy of the state to the idea that migration was responsible for the degeneration of the UK. That was the rhetorical context for Brexit, the environment into which the Leave campaigns stepped. That is a background too often ignored.

The dark money network

The week before the referendum, I stumbled into two Brexit campaigners for Leave carrying placards in Edinburgh. In their smallprint, the placards said that they’d been paid for by the Northern Irish DUP. So why was a Northern Irish party paying for propaganda in Edinburgh?

This question took my colleagues and me down the rabbit hole, which turned out to be a complex warren-system which we’ve been exploring for two years. Together with journalists at other publications, we’ve shown how millions of pounds appear to have flowed into the various Leave campaigns from question­able sources. And we’ve mapped how right-wing think tanks have come in behind a hard Brexit.

We’ve monitored thousands of pounds worth of Facebook adverts pushing a hard Brexit – paid for by who-knows-whom? Carole Cadwalladr at The Observer started from a different angle: looking at online debate, and what is and isn’t promoted by web monopolies like Google and Facebook. Together, what we’re looking at is the adaptation of elite propaganda to the age of social media and offshore finance.

Of course, legacy media and the state are still at the heart of those propaganda efforts, attempting to shape the agenda and drive politics in their preferred direction. They are determined to ensure that the debate about politics is a debate about which marginalised group is to blame, who’s in and who’s out, while questions of resource distribution – of housing, wages, and work – are matters for the market and, like the weather, may be cursed, but are not within anyone's control to change.

But alongside these traditional players, we see new agents emerging. At the centre of the warren we’ve been exploring is a cluster of firms linked to a company called SCL – formerly Strategic Communications Laboratories. You’ve probably heard of one of its offshoots, Cambridge Analytica, and another company from the same cluster that ran much of the Brexit campaign: AggregateIQ.

To understand these firms, we need to understand that Strategic Communications Laboratories describes itself as a ‘security’ company, and is essentially the psychological operations wing of our increasingly privatised military. “SCL Group provides data, analytics and strategy to governments and military organisations worldwide”, reads the first line of its website. “For over twenty-five years, we have conducted behavioural change programmes in over sixty countries and have been formally recognised for our work in defence and social change.” While it’s hard to know exactly what contracts they secured, we do know that they’ve done work in Afghanistan, Kenya, and elsewhere.

Cambridge Analytica (the company which ran Trump’s campaign) was a subsidiary of the SCL Group, and the Canadian company AggregateIQ, which received £3.4 million for their work on the Brexit campaign, and has long faced allegations of close connections to the SCL Group. AIQ created Cambridge Analytica’s software platform, and the firm was suspended from Facebook in 2018 over concerns about its alleged links with Cambridge Analytica.

This network is therefore best understood as a wing of the increasingly privatised security world, taking lessons from the wars in the Middle East and Global South and applying them to democratic events at home. They shouldn’t be seen as having limitless influence, and their own claims about psychometric profiling are based on little evidence. However, they also shouldn’t be underplayed. Social media, with its customised messaging, is the communications channel of the era, and it’s not surprising that elite networks are using it to shape politics.

Similarly, it shouldn’t be surprising that Cambridge Analytica emerged in the UK. Britain, after all, is the world centre for privatised military contractors, with more mercenary firms than any other country. This is a powerful network in the country, holding its own beliefs and interests, and it needs to be analysed and understood as such.

Sitting alongside this network are the people who, in the Brexit campaign, funded them. In a paper for the Transnational Institute (TNI) in early 2019 (1.), Reijer Hendrikse and Rodrigo Fernandez argued that offshore finance, “together with the wealth of the world’s billionaire class effectively constitutes the backbone of global capitalism.” And Britain, with its overseas territories and crown dependencies, is a key segment of this backbone, with the British state acting as one of the most important guardians of offshore wealth.

Follow the money which funded much of the controversial online campaigning in the Brexit referendum, as we have, and you find that it soon disappears offshore, into the UK’s network of tax havens and secrecy areas. There has been much speculation about whether the money was Russian or American or Saudi or British. But in a sense, this is missing the point. We know the cash came through the loopholes in Britain’s broken constitution. We know it came from abroad. That’s enough to tell us something important.

If offshore finance is becoming the backbone of the global economy, then we can expect it to continue to find ways to shape politics in its interests. As the elite networks which historically operated through states – like the military and intelligence communities – increasingly shift into private, transnational, and offshore firms, we can expect those networks to act in concert with the new backbone of capital. And as the media is changed radically by the emergence of the internet, we can expect them to use new technology – along with the newspapers they own and governments they can influence – to steer public debate and comprehension.

This is the triple threat we face today: news media, directed by faceless finance, finding common cause with the state, and leaving the task of transparency to a handful of investigative journalists piecing together clues to how the world is changing, and in whose interests.

Notes

1. Reijer Hendrikse and Rodrigo Fernandez, “Offshore Finance: How Capital Rules the World,” State of Power 2019, TNI Longreads, 2019​.

The original version of this piece appears in the section on Transparency in ‘A Vision for Europe’ (published by Eris in collaboration with DiEM25, May, 2019). For more information on the book’s content and launch events, see here.