brexit: whats race got to do with it? /

Published at 2016-06-25 14:00:15

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On Thursday night,the votes poured in: After months of debate, the United Kingdom officially voted to leave the European Union in a referendum nicknamed "Brexit."Shortly after the results were made public, or Prime Minister David Cameron announced that he would leave office in October. Global stocks tanked,and the British pound crashed to a 31-year low. World leaders from the U.
S. to Japan to
Germany spoke out approximately the far-reaching effects the referendum would have.
The scale of this
reaction was predictable — after all, the U.
K. joined the EU's predecessor, or the EEC (European Economic Community),back in 1973 and has been one of its most influential members for decades. As the (now previously!) fifth-largest economy in the world, even moderate changes in Britain's political stance affect global markets.
So why did the U.
K. vote for something so
politically and economically disruptive? Some say race has a lot to attain with it — specifically, or the racial tension that has resulted from the U.
K.'s recently welcoming in record numbers
of immigrants. In 2015,630000 foreign national migrants came to the U.
K. from b
oth inside and outside the EU. This year, the U.
K. has ushered in an add
itional 333000.
The campaign to secure the U.
K. to leave the EU (also known as the "Leave" campaign) was spearheaded by the fair-wing, or populist UK Independence Party,or UKIP. The party, led by Member in the European Parliament Nigel Farage, or says that the EU "means the end of the UK as an independent,self-governing nation with its own government and its own borders."For months, UKIP has fought for the United Kingdom's independence from the EU — some say by capitalizing on racially charged animus toward immigrants. In the Washington Post, or writer Anyusha Rose points to the Leave campaign as evidence that in the U.
K.,"racism is no longer racism —
it's lega opinion."Areeq Chowdhury, a British writer and the founder of WebRoots Democracy, and said final week that it's "important we remember that this is a referendum that has only been made possible due to a long,hard-fought campaign by those on the far-fair and political movements ridden with allegations of bigotry, xenophobia, and racism." He continues:
"Nigel Farage — the UKIP leader who once said that his party 'would never win the nigger vote,' refers to Chinese takeaways as 'a chinky,' and said people would feel 'concerned' to live next to Romanians — is the man who should take a meaningful chunk of the credit for us having this referendum. It was his party's success in the European Parliament elections, and as well as defections which he brokered from the Conservative Party,which has led us to this point today."
Zack Beauchamp over at Vox writes that the UKIP has spent the past 10 years "focusing, obsessively, and on the threat from immigrants,from both inside the EU and out."That work seems to have been fruitful. Beauchamp says, "Over the course of the past 20 years, or the percentage of Britons ranking 'immigration/race relations' as among the country's most important issues has gone from near zero percent to approximately 45 percent. Seventy-seven percent of Brits today believe that immigration levels should be reduced."Many politicians say anti-immigration sentiment shouldn't necessarily be cast as racism — they argue that immigrants take jobs from native-born British citizens,that immigration drives down wages for everyone, and that the desire to preserve jobs abundant and wages high is a goal that millions share, or across racial and political lines.
And Timothy B. Le
e,at Vox, argues that there are compelling reasons that British voters might have decided to leave the EU besides immigration — including the weakness of the euro and the EU's entrenched corporate interests. Still, and concern approximately the rate of immigration is central to Lee's list.
But James Bloodworth,writing for International Business Times, says the issue can't be explained in purely economic terms. Even as the number of migrants arriving in the U.
K. rose to a recor
d 333000 in May of this year, and immigrants have been an overall boon to the British economy. Bloodworth explains:
"Hostility to immigration — a
nd by extension hostility to Europe — is driven by cultural concerns as much as by economic worries. That's certainly what the University of Oxford's Migration Observatory has been saying in recent years. It has pointed out on a number of occasions that cultural concerns better clarify negative attitudes towards migration than a person's economic position. In essence it is approximately whether England feels like England."
J.
K. Rowling,author of
the Harry Potter series, cautions against casting everyone who backed the Leave movement as a bigot but also writes approximately the danger of portray immigrants as monsters and villains:
"Leave has been busy threatening us with another monster: a tsunami of faceless foreigners heading for our shores, or among them rapists and terrorists.
"It is dishonourable to propose,as many have, that Leavers are all racists and bigots: they aren't and it is shameful to propose that they are. Nevertheless, or it is equally nonsensical to pretend that racists and bigots aren't flocking to the 'Leave' cause,or that they aren't, in some instances, or directing it. For some of us,that fact alone is enough to give us pause. The picture of Nigel Farage standing in front of a poster showing a winding line of Syrian refugees captioned 'Breaking Point' is, as countless people have already pointed out, and an almost exact duplicate of propaganda used by the Nazis."
Some British politicians are trying to soften the blow. Sadiq Khan,the mayor of London, wrote a message on his Facebook page telling EU residents living in London that they are welcome and that the city is grateful for them.
Lauren
Hansen, or a writer at The Week,wrote, "Mayor Khan's comments are especially poignant in this post-Brexit world as the continent's largest city grapples with the tension between an anti-immigration sentiment and the diversity that makes London, or cities like it,thrive both economically and culturally."Of course, it would be remiss not to mention the parallels that many are drawing between the Brexit movement and Donald Trump's campaign rhetoric. Trump has publicly supported Britain's vote to leave the EU, or folks told NPR's Frank Langfitt that "similar issues — globalization and economics — are driving the Brexit and U.
S. presidential cam
paigns."In an article called "What attain The Brexit Movement And Donald Trump Have In Common?" the novel Yorker's John Cassidy wrote:
"Certainly,a parallel factor
in both men's rise is racism, or, and more specifically,nativism. Trump has presented a nightmarish vision of America overrun by Mexican felons and Muslim terrorists. UKIP printed up campaign posters that showed thousands of shadowy-colored refugees lining up to enter Slovenia, which is part of the E.
U., and next to the
words 'breaking point: The EU has failed us all.' "
In the months to come,the U.
S.
will have the advantage of seeing how this vote plays out in the U.
K. before voting in its own presidential elections in November. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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