Thursday

This is a momentous week. The EU referendum is more important than a General Election: where General Elections come around every five years, this is a once-in-a-generation vote, about the sort of country we are going to be. In earlier blog posts, and in interviews, I’ve made my personal position clear – I will be voting (in fact, using a postal vote, I’ve already voted) for the United Kingdom to remain in the European Union.

As I write this, the referendum outcome looks to be in the balance – with some evidence from oh-so-reliable opinion polls that support for ‘Brexit’ has strengthened over the campaign. The debate divides conventional political allegiances: we’ve seen a Cabinet deeply riven as ministers not only campaign on opposite sides but attribute the basest motives to each other. The opposition party, nominally in favour of the EU, has advocates for leaving such as Gisela Stuart and Kate Hoey and lukewarm support from the Labour leader. I invariably try to retain political neutrality in what I write: I agree with the Guardian’s conservative-leaning columnist Matthew d’Ancona that the country may be “days away from making a terrible mistake for deplorably stupid reasons”.

Everyone I’ve spoken to about the referendum – those passionately in favour of leaving, those equally passionate about staying and those still to decide – is in agreement about one thing. The campaign has been dire: “depressing, divisive and duplicitous” as the author Robert Harris put it in a tweet. Extravagant claims have been made on both sides, each trading in fear and mendacity. The Prime Minister, after months of careful negotiations about ‘revised membership terms’, has now argued that withdrawal will have devastating economic, social and geo-political consequences, begging the question of why he was prepared to risk an uncertain referendum. His opponents, led by Boris Johnson and Michael Gove, have equally implausibly argued that ‘if only’ we leave the European Union then all – absolutely all, it seems – of our difficulties will evaporate. Such claims insult voters. The debate has become focused on threats and fears, from the impact on the pound, to the impact of migration, to the housing market, in each case playing to the electorate’s worst instincts. The murder of the Batley and Spen MP, Jo Cox, against the background of this tense and unpleasant argument was truly shocking.

It’s been the wrong debate: this has to be about the longer term. We live in an interdependent world where the greatest threats – climate change, cyber security, terrorism, food security, population health – and the great opportunities – knowledge mobilisation, cultural exchange – do not respect borders. It’s a world in which movement of people is something we all take for granted, in which ideas move around the world at phenomenal speed. Universities increasingly drive this world: generating ideas through worldwide partnerships, attracting students globally, and connecting students and staff in international exchanges. The number of students studying outside their country of residence has more than doubled to 4 million in thirty years. It’s no wonder that the UK’s university leaders – normally a fractious bunch – are united in support for remaining in the EU. Anne Glover, the former chief scientific adviser to the EU is clear: science, knowledge creation and universities benefit hugely from membership.

Of course, it looks different from some parts of the country. In large tracts of the UK the very things driving excitement in universities – the free flow of people, challenging ideas, questioning received wisdom – look less attractive. The extraordinary changes of the last generation have been profoundly destabilising for many. The transformation of the workplace by technologies and new patterns of working, shifting assumptions about gender roles, the changing cultural complexion of communities – all these are seen by some as threatening rather than stimulating. For those, the ‘Brexit’ slogan ‘take back control’ has superficial attractiveness. Universities’ enthusiasm for the EU, seen through those lenses, is mere self-interest.

But ‘Brexit’ would not change our world. It would not redirect the powerful winds of change – for good and ill – coursing through the world, but it will give us less leverage to mobilise responses to them. It would not alter the great technological, cultural, demographic, economic, social force moulding our world, but it would turn us inward. Those supporting ‘Brexit’ have made a great deal of our history as a proud nation state. But Britain has also been an outward looking nation: a trading nation, an exploring nation, an inquisitive nation. It has been open to and engaged with the world; above all, it is a nation of migrants, through waves of arrivals including seventeenth century Huguenots, nineteenth century Jews and twentieth century Caribbeans and South Asians.

Times of change produce uncertainty, and often a desire to retreat to the apparently familiar. The referendum debate has revealed ugly divisions in our society. Whatever the outcome, healing those will demand imagination, empathy, and the sort of imaginative leadership which has been absent during the campaign. But to turn away from the European Union would be a dreadful mistake. It would represent a loss of collective confidence in our ability to work with others. “Isolation”, observes Neal Ascherson in a disturbing New York Times article, “brings out the worst in Britain”.

The case for membership of the European Union is strong and positive. In the great sweep of history, Britain has always been a European nation, intimately engaged with the politics, cultures and economy of Europe. As Simon Schama puts it in his Financial Times article:  “[to be] British [is] also to be a citizen of the wider world including Europe“.

The EU has been one of the major institutions which have brought prosperity and peace to a continent riven by centuries of conflict and destruction. In the depths of a shattered Europe in the 1950s, establishing it was an act of visionary imagination. It has shown itself capable of dealing with those questions – from pollution to international crime to trading standards – which are too big for nation states. Its regional programmes have directed investment to areas in desperate need of sustained support. It has brokered co-operation which would once have been impossible. These are huge achievements: perhaps too large for us to quite hold in our minds in thinking about the day-to-day.

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But it can be simply put. We vote in this referendum precisely one hundred years after many of our grandfathers were preparing for the Battle of the Somme, fighting on battlefields in Europe which had seen bloodshed for centuries. We now take European peace for granted. A glance at our past tells us that peace is precious and precarious. Beyond the arguments about the economy, taxation, getting and spending, that is what matters. For our grandchildren as yet unborn, the vote has to be to Remain.

 

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