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The_Guardian_-_2016-12-29

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EU referendum and Brexit<br />

Opinion<br />

People voted Brexit. But Cameron, Blair and<br />

other flawed leaders made it possible<br />

Ros Coward<br />

<strong>The</strong> former prime minister’s laziness, Boris Johnson’s hubris and Michael Gove’s disloyalty: so<br />

much hinged on personality failings<br />

‘In robust circumstances when political checks and balances are working well, then leaders’<br />

character traits and even flaws don’t matter so much.’ Boris Johnson with David Cameron in 20<strong>12</strong>.<br />

Photograph: Yui Mok/PA<br />

Wednesday 28 December <strong>2016</strong> 15.08 GMT Last modified on Wednesday 28 December <strong>2016</strong><br />

22.00 GMT<br />

<strong>The</strong> usual view of history for left-leaning liberals is that the character of the leading protagonists is<br />

secondary. <strong>The</strong> real drivers of history are socio-economic forces. Marxist views of history, which I<br />

imbibed as an undergraduate, take this further: history is determined by material conditions – wages,<br />

working conditions, social relations. But in moments of crisis, such as the EU referendum and its<br />

consequences, personality flaws really do matter. When events are finely balanced, what this or that<br />

individual does can make all the difference.<br />

We need a mature Brexit debate – we’re not

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