Common sense has been suspended in Westminster and volatility has returned to the betting market

We have not sent any Boscobel bulletins recently, as the firm has been flat out on the campaign to extend the runway at Heathrow, instead of building a 3rd Runway. We won the support of most business commentators and of numerous MPs because the concept is cheaper, quicker, quieter and simpler to construct. It has sadly thus far been thwarted by the Department for Transport and Heathrow Airport Ltd itself. Following the significant vote in Parliament for the 3rd Runway, our client is examining various legal options and has already complained to the Competition and Markets Tribunal.

In the meantime, our thoughts now turn to Friday 6th July when, not only will England – hopefully – be preparing for a critical World Cup game, but the Cabinet is scheduled to meet at Chequers to decide its strategy for EU negotiations.

If we don’t have a Cabinet resignation either before, during or after the meeting it will be a miracle.

The matter at hand is to agree what sort of Customs relationship we are trying to negotiate with the EU. At this stage, nobody has properly asked the EU for their view. This will also need to be agreed by Parliament via an amendment to the Trade Bill in coming weeks.

Customs and Chequers

Until yesterday, two verbally inelegant solutions were on the table: either a) the New Customs Partnership (effectively inside the Customs Union, remitting revenues to the EU but allowing lower UK duties via a return mechanism with HMRC) favoured by the Prime Minister; or b) a Maximum Facilitation arrangement, outside the Customs Union but using enhanced software to enable smooth-running trade. The latter is favoured by Brexiteers.

Having spoken to various CEOs who actually import and export items, including as part of complex supply chains, I am convinced this is a bizarre argument. One retail CEO explained to me how large companies in Asia use “bonded factories” to ensure no duty is paid during the manufacturing process. A CEO of a large port has explained that only two containers were opened on his quaysides last year, because all import/export is conducted via trusted trader schemes and policed at place of origin or destination.

So, this issue has become a political cultural war, a linguistic proxy for re-fighting the referendum via other means. The front line may be in the Cabinet, but vast divisions have been mobilising miles away. Just to make things easier, massive egos are also involved and the Prime Minister sits in the middle, apparently unable to make a decision, and refracting everything through the lens of her own survival.

Just to make things even more complicated, my understanding is that the issue of the Customs Border in Ireland isn’t really about Customs at all, but alignment in goods regulations, especially agriculture.

I sit on the advisory board of a think tank called Open Europe and we have proposed what I believe is a sensible compromise, whereby the UK remains aligned with EU goods regulations, but goes for an equivalence regime for services, as that is where the bulk of our competitive advantage lies. On Customs, we have proposed a Max Fac type arrangement. This idea has been well received by nearly everyone we have spoken to.

What is not commonly appreciated is the Cabinet is not only divided on Brexit, but other matters too, including the small matter of tax and spending. There are also divisions within the factions too. The Tory Remainers are also divided, between those who are leaning towards “enough already, let’s just get on with it” and those in the Treasury and the Department of Business who wish to draw out Brexit as long as possible in the hope it goes away. There is no economic strategy to speak of.

Intrigue in the betting market

Late summer, early Autumn is the traditional time for a Conservative leadership contest. Thus far, one has been avoided for four reasons: the need to get on with the EU exit bill; the fear among moderates that it would result in Boris Johnson as Prime Minister; the worry that it would result in three months of turmoil; and the lack of a credible alternative to Mrs May.

All these obstructions have suddenly fallen away. The Bill has been passed and the question is now who will implement the next stage of the strategy. Boris Johnson has apparently been skewered by the Heathrow decision and made to look foolish by the principled resignation of the trade minister Greg Hands. As Brexit day gets closer next March, 1940 custom and practice is likely to override the actual rules of a leadership contest and thereby provide cover to avoid both a vote of the Conservative party membership and an immediate General Election.

Critically, a potential alternative to Mrs May has emerged in the form of Sajid Javid, the new Home Secretary, who has got off to an excellent start. His “pulled-myself-up-by-my-own-bootstraps” background and apparently Thatcher-esque economic views have created a whiff of excitement.

Media interest in Mr Javid has also excited the range-bound political betting market, which like Westminster has been in stasis since the General Election last year. Over the weekend, after he topped a poll of Conservative party members, the Betfair website pushed him into the favourite position as the next Conservative leader, with an implied probability of 20%, ahead of the next most popular, Michael Gove, with a probability of 15%.

The price has since dropped back. Despite Mr Gove’s reputation in popular culture as a treacherous fellow, Tory MPs trust him to get things done.

In politics, as in markets, late summer/early autumn is the traditional time for brouhaha. We advise watching not just the news, but prices, for signs of further volatility.

 

 

 

 

 

It is official – Brexit squabbling is damaging the economy

The British economy is slowing. There. I have said it. After repeatedly writing upbeat pieces for CapX to counter the doom and gloom mongers in the last two years, the facts are changing and so is my mind.

I would go further and say that the weakness of the economy, much of it Brexit-related, is going to put the skids under the tedious stasis which passes for political activity in Westminster these days. Voters are going to be cross.

Extreme Remainers and Brexiteers in Parliament better watch out in case they get the blame. And horror of horrors, Jeremy Corbyn’s claim that there is something fundamentally wrong with the way the economy is managed might yet land on fertile ground.

The full article was published on CapX and is available to read at this link.

How bad will the local elections be for the Conservatives?

An interesting poll of London voters has been published, slightly changing the working assumptions about the Local Elections next Thursday, May 3rd. The results could be the most significant for a local election since 1990, in which a rout in the capital and other major cities prepared the way for Margaret Thatcher being removed from office six months later. Rows over Europe predominated, she had fallen out with her chancellor, interest rates were rising. You get the picture.

Received wisdom is that the elections this time are going to see the Conservatives receive a drubbing, for a host of obvious reasons I have commented on before but which we need not dwell on now. Today’s poll by YouGov in partnership with Queen Mary University of London, gives Labour 51%, a massive 22 point lead in the 32 London boroughs, but down from 26% in February (the last poll).

In inner London, Labour’s rating is down 8 points to 59% and the Conservatives up five to 22%.

On these numbers, the Conservatives would apparently lose Barnet council, retain Westminster and cling on in Wandsworth. If that were the case, despite a disastrous performance, Theresa May could claim that she had done better than expected. A 29% vote share would be the same David Cameron won in 2014.

It ought to be a source of deep concern to her, however, that the Labour lead among BME voters in London is an astonishing 62%.

My experience is that the further you get from London, the more popular is Theresa May. James Kanagasooriam, a political adviser to Ruth Davidson in Scotland, tweeted recently “the Tories aren’t at risk of losing all councils. Bexley+Bromley likely to stay blue. Expect big Tory gains in Havering/Sutton. Hillingdon looks like a hold. Kingston, Richmond, Barnet, Wandsworth and Westminster all v.close”. Lots of people say: “I wouldn’t want her job, it looks horrible.”

There are reasons for caution and not drawing too many fixed conclusions at this point:

  • It is a poll of only 1,099 people
  • London is very hard to poll
  • Just because the London-based media is howling on about things, doesn’t mean everyone else is. That said, the media remains a significant demotic power base in its own right and Labour are skilful at manipulating it (especially social media).
  • One fifth of all Jewish people in the country live in Barnet. Is that borough really going to vote for a Labour council as this poll apparently suggests? I will only believe that when I see it.
  • Anecdotal evidence, especially in Richmond, is that the Lib Dems may put in a strong showing. This poll doesn’t seem to have picked that up, giving them an unchanged 11%. I can tell you that Barnes, for instance, is a forest of Lib Dem signs. My guess is that the Lib Dems could do better than many admit.
  • Unlike in the EU Referendum and in the General Election, EU citizens are allowed to vote. In the past, they have mostly stayed at home. What will they do this time?

As ever, we will have to await the results.

It is 1956 and all that again in Westminster

The Establishment may be having a wobble, but things could be much worse

It hasn’t been this bad since the Suez Crisis. That is what some are saying in Westminster. What we still call the Establishment is divided and demoralised, awaiting “clarity” on Brexit. Britain is arguably involved in another international escapade which is being executed incompetently and with insufficient vigour or realism.

There are those who hope, somewhat ungallantly, that the Prime Minister might resign due to ill health, like her predecessor Sir Anthony Eden after the botched Anglo-French-Israeli attempt to reclaim the Suez Canal. The papers are full of treacherous speculation.

As in 1956 those in positions of leadership in politics, in business and even charities are doubly nervous because of changes in the media. They have some sympathy for Theresa May. Who will the media mob turn on next, they ask? Today, it is social media; in 1950s it was television.

Eden was overwhelmed by a censorious global media firestorm. According to the UN, by 1960 there were 56m television sets in the United States and 11m in the United Kingdom, twice the number five years before. The end of Empire was broadcast live on the CBS Evening News and at home on ITN and on BBC News.

60 Tory rebels
In the 1950s, a group of some 60 Tory backbenchers called the Suez Group (sound familiar?), was founded, whose activities were animated when Britain negotiated a withdrawal from the international Canal Zone, which the British Government part-owned and administered.

Eden has since been represented as an Imperial dinosaur, but actually his policy was organised withdrawal from Empire, leaving behind a string of bases (including in Suez), some hopefully friendly governments and that amorphous thing traditionally prized above all else by the British Establishment: “influence”.

But Eden was at the beck and call of the Suez Group, and Sir Winston Churchill, who made way for him as Prime Minister in 1955, was their idol. As ever, Churchill’s policy was to never to surrender. On the other side was the pro-Soviet and anti-Western President Nasser of Egypt who nationalised the Suez Canal in July 1956. There was widespread indignation in Britain and in France and a fear that trade with Asia would be cut off.

The role of the media was to argue for resolute action when the Suez Canal was nationalised, but as the affair unfolded it dramatically turned on the Government until only the Daily Express (circulation, 4 million copies a day) supported Eden.

The Treasury and the Bank of England don’t like it
The Treasury and the Bank of England were both against military action by Britain and France without American support. Although the economy was recovering from the war and unemployment was at a record low, the pound was fixed to the dollar at $2.80. The fear was it would not survive a speculative attack.

The economic situation was exacerbated by the fact that half our oil supplies came through the Suez Canal (as did much of our goods trade). Traffic was blocked and the oil price went through the roof. Petrol rationing was introduced. Many ex-colonial countries and corporates had sterling deposits which they began to withdraw from London and soon the Bank of England’s foreign exchange reserves started to dwindle.

The IMF found a role
The International Monetary Fund likes to claim that Autumn 1956 was its baptism of fire, the first time it provided emergency lending. Initially, the Americans (who had always opposed colonialism and saw the British and French as playing into Russian hands) blocked a loan to support sterling. This was the proximate reason why Britain and France halted military action in November 1956. They had sent their air forces, a naval task force and paratroopers to the Canal, supposedly to prevent Israel and Egypt from fighting each other. This was a ruse.

Gaitskell was no Corbyn
However, the comparison between now and 1956 has its limits and should not be taken too far. Eden had in fact just won an election the previous year handsomely, with a majority of 60 seats and a majority of the popular vote. A change of party leader did not bring with it the risk of a collapse of the Government and letting in a Jeremy Corbyn-style figure. The Labour leader was Hugh Gaitskell, a charismatic moderate who played both the press and international opinion skilfully.

The stakes are much smaller now too. Eden lying to Parliament about the covert agreement with France and Israel to intervene is surely worse in magnitude than the infamous “£350m for the NHS” claim. No military action is in prospect today; nor isolation at the United Nations; nor a bailout from the IMF. And President Trump publicly supports Brexit, whereas Eisenhower opposed the Suez campaign. In other words, this time round a sensible outcome should theoretically be possible to negotiate, at some point, as long as we take a global approach and work to keep international opinion on side (not much sign of that).

Markets don’t like weak governments
That said, the parallels are instructive. Markets do not like weak governments and it is noticeable that the Government’s recent travails have left the FTSE 100 underperforming global markets. It is also remarkable that the British economy has so far withstood the constantly negative outpourings of the financial press, business lobby groups etc. One wonders how long it can do so. The construction industry PMI, for instance, last month showed activity is flatlining and new housebuilding has gone off a cliff.

As 1956 turned to 1957, the front runner to replace Eden was actually RAB Butler. But Harold Macmillan, the cunning chancellor, was the person who was surprisingly supported by most of his colleagues to be Prime Minister. Macmillan had been pro-military action but then changed his mind after the Americans failed to support it.

Who is Macmillan now? My guess, for what it is worth, is Michael Gove. He may be the Harold Macmillan of Brexit, the only man with the attention to detail and ability to appeal to both sides of the Conservative party.

A diplomatic resignation
Macmillan had a reputation for deviousness and subsequently noted that if Eden had not resigned due to ill health, a “diplomatic resignation” might have been required.

A “Theresa May resigns through ill-health” scenario might be cowardly, but it is convenient for some. A resignation on health grounds, accompanied by some liberal dollops of spin and hypocrisy, would avoid a vote of no confidence among Conservative MPs. A prolonged leadership election in which Tory members can vote might also be avoided, to be replaced by a coronation. There is one issue: public support for Mrs May is deeper outside the Westminster bubble than inside it. Sometimes it seems her critics, rather than she, are having a wobble.

Macmillan leads a recovery
Macmillan actually recovered well from the Suez debacle. Perhaps helped by a positive relationship with President John F Kennedy, he adapted to the requirements of television. He actually accelerated the withdrawal from Empire and ostentatiously ordered the Polaris independent nuclear deterrent. He rebuilt the “special relationship” with America. He went on to win the 1959 election with a 100 seat majority accompanied by the soundbite “we have never had it so good”, before coming unstuck himself four years later.

Until the Vietnam War and oil crises threw the West off course, the 1960s were a time of relative social and economic idyll. Macmillan re-oriented Britain towards membership of the European Economic Community – at the time, a trade partnership – as a new anchor for British foreign policy. Which takes us back to where we are today. Who has the strength and vision to re-anchor Britain now? We will have to wait and see and in the meantime console ourselves with the ultimate lesson from the Suez Crisis: things could be a whole lot worse.

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