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© Kirsty Pargeter

In two days, the UK will hold its first referendum for forty years, as the country’s populace votes on is continuing membership of the European Union, or not. Below is the personal view of the referendum from The Loadstar’s team of senior writers, primarily intended for our non-UK readers, and it has very little to do with logistics and supply chains, just three more voices to add to the cacophony of millions…

Alex Lennane, Loadstar Publisher

Alex Lennane

Alex Lennane

I’d have written differently, just a few days ago.

The mood in the UK was highly charged, angry. But now, as I write, the candles lit in memory of the murdered MP, Jo Cox, flicker across the river, from her boat on the opposite bank of the Thames. Each night since her death, at 8pm, the mournful horns of the houseboats sound, echoing across the river.

Her death cannot have been all about Europe. But the ‘debate’ – a term I use in the loosest possible sense – whipped up ill-feeling, intolerance. The alarming sounds of gunshots and Donald Trump bellow across the Atlantic, loud and clear. The drumbeats from far right politicians beat over the Channel.

And here, in a vote we did not need, led by people we do not like, the two sides selected their weapons.

The Remainers, led by David Cameron, a man whose election millions are still regretting, picked fear. The economy will stop growing, house prices will go down. Jobs will be lost. There’s even a whipping stick budget and higher taxes if the electorate dares to vote leave. Lots of sticks, far fewer carrots.

And the Brexiters? They have chosen a racially charged campaign, inspired by Trump, they have stoked fear and loathing. They have lied and cheated, manipulated and misled.

Saddest of all, to us Europhiles, is that no one has cited the many positives of the EU.

It’s been a strange period. A high-street retailer went bust from greed; we’ve endured an unedifying Tory versus Tory fight, with lies, damn lies, and statistics; a tragic death; endless rain.

I am scared for Britain if it rejects the EU. It is a flawed organisation, but better to try to mend it than become isolated, little Englanders, fearful of all that is foreign.

But a rabid media, entrenched interests and political confusion has made people uncertain, made them want to regain control. Instead of fighting the true enemy – inequality– they fight Europe and some of the better things about our world.

We have already been failed by our politicians, and we all are paying the price.

Gavin van Marle, Loadstar Editor

Gavin van Marle

Gavin van Marle

Since almost the beginning of this seemingly never-end ‘em referendum (yup, still got the poetry), the feeling that it is a little more than a disguised power-grab by “outers” Boris Johnson and Michael Gove has been increasingly hard to shake off, while the logic for a Brexit appears spurious beyond belief.

I get it that a lot of people in the UK’s heartlands feel disenfranchised from the European project, although what a lot of them don’t realise is that that feeling is also shared by million across the EU. I understand the complaints about the EC’s bureaucracy; the unfairness of the UK’s willingness to implement European legislation while other countries wilfully ignore them; that many of the working class feel threatened by the arrival of migrants from other parts of Europe competing for jobs and increasingly scarce housing stock and threadbare public services.

But I do not buy the arguments – and the hysterical screeching of many Brexiters make them sound like the outright lies that they are in actuality – that exiting the EU represents a solution to these. It doesn’t. It’s the complete reverse – the UK is better placed to address all of these while it remains part of the EU and those who say otherwise do so because they have something to gain from the chaos that will be unleashed.

The economy is, by its very nature, an unpredictable biosystem. We don’t know whether the UK’s economy would fare better inside or outside the EU, but the gambler in me says that it is not a risk worth taking.

Leaving aside the economic arguments, there is also a cultural aspect – I grew up in a suburban English town in the 1980s; an Englishman with a distinctly foreign surname and I am well versed in the low-level xenophobia that was the default setting for many of my depressingly ignorant countrymen.

However, over the last twenty-five years I have seen that recede, so I shall be voting Remain this week, because if for nothing else it is a more enlightening and enlightened place for me and my family to live in.

Mike Wackett, Editorial Consultant

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Mike Wackett

I have yet to hear anybody from the Leave camp with a viable plan of action post the referendum on Thursday, should the UK vote to resign from the European Union.

Moreover, there is a general consensus of economists and senior business folk predicting that an ‘Out’ vote will not only be bad news for the UK’s economy, but also potentially destabilise Europe’s fragile recovery and shock the global economy.

The Leave campaigners do not disagree, “there will be bumps in the road,” they admit.

That is the worst news for investors, who have an understandable aversion to uncertainty.

Leaving the EU would only make some sense if the UK’s economy was suffering as a consequence of membership. It is not; quite the reverse.

Despite, or maybe because of, the UK’s special status of not being within the single currency, London is the hub of Europe’s financial sector.

According to the Barclays Trade Index the UK’s total service sector accounts for 80% of the economy and within the next 10 years will be worth half of the nation’s exports in value.

Post a Brexit vote international banks, financial service companies and legal firms et al will be packing their bags for Paris, Frankfurt or Dublin.

But, the Leave campaigners thump their chests and hark back to the days when the sun never set on the British Empire. “We will be ok,” they say, without really knowing how that will actually happen in the changed world of the 21st Century.

It is only when you travel abroad on business, or stray away from the tourist spots on holiday, that you realise how high the status of the UK’s ‘soft power’ is; and many people are horrified at the prospect of the UK leaving the EU.

In my shipping career I have made many business contacts around Europe, which have developed into long-term friendships and I am uncomfortable that the UK is considering quitting the EU without staying to fight its corner.

Yes, the EU has its flaws – as does any membership grouping – but in my view the positives greatly outweigh the negatives.

The UK needs to be sitting at the table to have a say in the future of Europe.

It so happens that Britain is due to take over the Presidency of the Council of the European Union in July next year: I very much hope that the UK is chairing the first meeting.

Comment on this article


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  • Andrew Austin

    June 21, 2016 at 5:32 pm

    Well done to you all in sharing your personal views, candidly and openly, on the Referendum question.

  • Capt. Ed Enos

    June 21, 2016 at 9:36 pm

    Oh how entirely expected to see Alex include the anti-Trump hysteria, not once, but twice in her op-ed. Gee whiz, does it ever end? One out of three opinions. Thats about right for over here in America, too.

    You all speak of some degree of “fear” of something, whatever that boogey man might be. And as we would expect, the fear and loathing of the issues at the core of the entire BREXIT debate include the obvious immigration, racial tensions, etc…Even the murder of your MP Jo Cox has to be tossed into the debate, of course. What a coincidence. There was an attempt on Trump’s life yesterday. But you won’t read that in our MSM.

    BTW…it’s no surprise that here in America, our liberal left wing biased “lame stream media” was quick to assign the Jo Cox murderer as a “white supremacist” (CNN headline, for their low info viewers). So there is ample hysteria revolving around racial tension and the immigration discussion on both sides of the proverbial pond.

    As an American, it’s none of my damn business what you all decide to do among yourselves. And that is how it should be. That’s your decision that only you can make. Sadly, that is NOT a feeling shared by that idiot we have that has taken up residence for 8 years in the White House. I cringed at him telling Britons that you should all stay with the EU. It’s not about his opinion or what he believes….he just didn’t need to say it. We were all waiting for one of you to tell him to “Please, shut up!”

    My skin crawled when I read this piece, after I read the inclusion of Trump’s name. WTF? The American news cycle is replete with so many leaders at every level of our nation, states, and counties pointing the finger of blame at everyone else and everything else. Our media is saturated with journalist (I’m using THAT word lightly) expressing the opinions of BLAME everyday.

    What we need is a mirror.

    I don’t need to read an opinion from a British citizen including Donald Trump as another whipping boy for your problems over there. Get real. You had your hands full with numerous issues, long before he started his campaign.

    Does personal accountability and responsibility exist anywhere in the world today???? Nope. BOTH your country and mine seem to have a growing sector of intellectually lazy people who want to point their finger at everyone else and say, “Yea, that guy, it’s his fault!”

    Or as Gavin would say; “…for many of my depressingly ignorant countrymen…”
    Well done. You underscore my point.

    Your country today is what it is. I (and many others over here) hardly recognize “Londonistan” anymore. The FEAR you all feel about any issue, is self inflicted. The FEAR of spinning yourself off and away from the EU is a different kind of emotion. That’s called “uncertainty” and it’s a tough one for younger people to deal with today. That would be a reference to Alex’s and Gavin’s opinion. Neither of you don’t want to do the heavy lifting. That’s not only understood, it’s been made clear the last several years by the political and social choices you all have already made. Your grandparents that fought for the Great Britain you live in today are turning over in the grave.

    Relax, its the same over here. !8 year old men stormed the beaches of Normandy to fight back and help our foreign friends survive. Today, 18 year old American men demand being protected from speech they don’t like hearing in college. Boo-hoo.

    Mike’s opinion makes the case for “staying in” in an intelligent presentation. I would agree on most all that he has stated. Though I might be open to hear more example’s of Britain’s “soft power”. But I’ll admit, Barak Obama’s feckless leadership for 8 years has given America a rather “flaccid” approach to all things political. I’ll readily accept America’s flaws under our current political regime.

    I also agree with Mike’s contention that, with the EU under British leadership as their President next year, that may be the single best reason to stay in. Give it a go! Force the euros to pay attention and actually “do something” to change the course of events to the benefit of the countries to which you serve within the European Nation. Stop worrying about helping everyone else! Your own countrymen deserve more attention than that you are heaping upon immigrants.

    Again, we Americans are also saddled with politicians that strive for the same ‘feel good’ brand of leadership that makes us feel warm and cozy. Similar to that DEMAND which many young Americans are asking for…the infamous “safe space.”

    I wish you the best of luck. We are quietly watching over here. I’ll wager you stay in. It’s a no brainer. The vast majority of people today (all of us, everywhere) do not have the mental capacity or spine to work hard at something that seems just a little out of reach, no matter how beneficial it may be. It’s easier to go with what you have, settle in, and deal with the misery you know and feel you can manage.

    Isn’t that a sad statement on western society today?

    Otherwise, great newsletter you all put together each day. One of the best out there in our industry. Keep up the excellent work

  • Jean-Baptiste Perrin

    June 22, 2016 at 11:41 am

    Glad to see that you are all on the same wavelength (more or less) and want to remain with us… 🙂