Ten years ago, the Brexit referendum led to the United Kingdom’s departure from the European Union. The process exposed the vulnerability of secession referendums to misinformation, demagoguery, and outright falsehoods. Britain's withdrawal from the EU’s common institutions, single market, and customs union left a deep economic scar from which the country has yet to recover.
Amid economic decline and the political and institutional instability overseen by the Conservative Party, the Labour Party eventually returned to power under the leadership of Keir Starmer, winning a clear parliamentary majority. Yet, much as happened with Joe Biden in the United States, Starmer has found it difficult to set the country on a new course.
Starmer has not proved to be an especially inspiring leader, but the objective circumstances make governing exceptionally difficult. He is not the only centre-left leader on the international stage facing such challenges, although it would be wrong to conclude that the centre-left—or the left more broadly—is collapsing everywhere.
This is the vicious circle of populism. Populist movements leave countries so damaged that the governments that succeed them struggle to deliver meaningful improvements, thereby creating fresh demand for new populist alternatives. In the United Kingdom, the politician leading the challenge to Starmer is none other than Nigel Farage, one of the principal figures behind the Leave campaign in the Brexit referendum.
Nor is it only Farage. Another major protagonist of the nationalist-populist wave of the 2010s, the Scottish nationalist movement, has regained momentum just when it appeared to be in decline as a result of poor governance and corruption scandals.
The solution to Labour’s difficulties will not be the “radical centre” advocated by Tony Blair, the mentor of Peter Mandelson. Blair now sits on the board of a media conglomerate close to Donald Trump, as Jonathan Freedland has noted, and serves alongside the current U.S. president on the so-called Board of Peace, an initiative that attempts to provide a thin veneer of legitimacy to the ethnic cleansing of Gaza.
More promising ideas could emerge from advancing a bold strategy for rejoining Europe, developed in alliance with centre-left and left-wing forces across the continent. Such a coalition could range from the Nordic social democrats to Pedro Sánchez in Spain, as well as technocratic reformers in Italy such as Mario Draghi and Enrico Letta.
Ideologically, Labour should engage with the economists associated with the London Consensus, while adding a crucial political dimension: leaders must possess the ambition and determination exemplified by figures such as Zohran Mamdani, and they must focus on building coalitions capable of surviving beyond a single electoral cycle.
The supposedly great institutions of the British political system did not prevent the United Kingdom from making the historic mistake of Brexit, nor have they halted the country’s relative decline. In light of the experiences of both the United States and the United Kingdom—the rise of Trump and Brexit, and their consequences—the arguments of the book Why Nations Fail deserve substantial reconsideration.
