High Priest of Fear Carney
Itโs been a good week for Bank of England Governor, Mark Carney, who has secured his job with the Chancellor extending his term through to 2020. How did the pair of economic heavyweights celebrate? By sitting down with the Cabinet and delivering a three-and-a-half-hour blow by blow account of what the UKโs economy would look like in the event of a โno-deal Brexitโ.
Unsurprisingly, the banker who was referred to as the โhigh priest of Project Fearโ by Chair of the European Research Group Jacob Rees-Mogg, and the pro-remain Chancellor didnโt paint a rosy picture of what the future might hold.
Leaked information about the contents of the highly confidential meeting โ it appears as though every news outlet in the UK had an inside source present at the meeting โ report that in the event of economic adversity, the bank wouldnโt be able to cut interest rates to mitigate the damage as they did after the 2016 EU Referendum, and that house prices could fall as much as 35% over three years, with mortgage rates rising.
The assessment is likely to further inflame views of the high priest by some of his parish.
Gove Glams Up Government Department
Defra published its much-anticipated Agriculture Bill this week, outlining the post-Brexit policy of one of the departments most impacted by UKโs departure from the EU. With new-found freedom, Defra Secretary Michael Gove has given the Department a makeover so good itโs gone from the least to the most glamorous department in Whitehall.
The Department is arguably the most positive about Brexit, setting out in the Bill how it hopes to redefine British agriculture policy after the sectorโs membership in the EUโs much-criticised Common Agricultural Policy. It is proudly presenting itself as a leader of the conversation on environmental sustainability, having capitalised on public support for reducing single-use plastic consumption, and for embracing the potential of technology. The Bill commits to financially rewarding farmers for contributing to public goods instead of the CAPโs policy of funding farmers according to land farmed which critics highlighted gave more money to wealthy landowners than to smaller, less wealthy farmers. The Bill specifically listed air and water quality, improved soil health, higher animal welfare standards, public access to the countryside, and measures to reduce flooding as the public goods it prioritised.
Shadow Environment Secretary Sue Hayman criticised the Bill for its lack of consideration of nutrition and long-term food security, which is particularly pertinent considering obesity levels in the UK being considered by Government itself to be a public health crisis. The Bill also fails to implement a domestic replacement to the EUโs School Milk Scheme, setting the Conservatives up to receive their yet-again deserved โmilk snatcherโ jibes for the second time in as many months.
End the chaosโฆ what chaos?
Campaigner and โenemy of the peopleโ, Gina Miller, has launched a new campaign called End the Chaos whose role will be to end division and anxiety over Brexit with a new fact-checking website. Launched in Dover, the heartland of Brexit the photo used to launch the campaign features Gina standing in a pale blue suit standing in heels on the very edge of the white cliffs โ a peculiar choice given the campaignโs goal to reduce anxiety.
Miller said the campaign was prompted by a โtotal lack of clarityโ over Brexit and said it was โmorally and democratically right to give people as much information as possible about the implications of Brexit so they can make informed choicesโ. Though Brexiteers will ask what choice is there to be made, another referendum?
Never Knowingly Undermined
This week John Lewis suffered its worst financial performance in years with a 99% drop in half-year profiits and warned that margins are under pressure. Among a list of reasons for the poor performance? Sir Charlie Mayfield, Chairman of the John Lewis Partnership said uncertainty in the market โin part due to ongoing Brexit negotiationsโ had contributed to the problem.
This sparked a war of words between the organisationโs executives and Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab who said โitโs rather easy for a business to blame Brexit and the politicians rather than take responsibility for their own situationโ. Later in the day Sir Charlie returned fire saying he โdidnโt say Brexit was the reasonโ but โthe fact is sterling is weaker, itโs more expensive to import goodsโฆ so we have to absorb that within our marginโ. He also added โIโm not going to get into some sort of ding-dong with the Secretary of Stateโ โ though this would have been much more entertaining.
Should May Stay (or should she go)?
This may sound repetitive, but this week there were renewed calls for Theresa May to leave once Brexit talks are finished in March 2019. This is normally a common call from disgruntled members of the Conservative Party, of which there are many. But this week it came from one of her own, her ex-policy adviser George Freeman who said she should leave in March 2019. He sugar-coated it slightly, saying that she had been an โextraordinaryโ leader, but the message is still the same; out with Theresa!
He said โthe shape of our future relationship must be forged by a new leader. Someone liberated from the poisonous politics of EU referendum and the shambles that has followedโ. That number however, is slim and excludes some of the more traditional contenders like Boris Johnson, Michael Gove, Penny Mordaunt, Sajid Javid and even Dominic Raab. Perhaps then we should be looking for those who have kept relatively quiet, but not too quiet.
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