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Au Revoir Britannia by Sylvie Bermann sampler

From her unique perspective as former French ambassador to the UK, Sylvie Bermann examines the mistruths told by politicians surrounding the fateful 2016 Brexit referendum. Au Revoir Britannia asks the question ‘How did this happen?’ and exposes what she sees as the ‘unrepenting’ and ‘inveterate’ lies of the now pm, Boris Johnson. This first English edition includes a new preface exploring the future of post-Brexit Europe and Britain, and the uncertain implications of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

From her unique perspective as former French ambassador to the UK, Sylvie Bermann examines the mistruths told by politicians surrounding the fateful 2016 Brexit referendum. Au Revoir Britannia asks the question ‘How did this happen?’ and exposes what she sees as the ‘unrepenting’ and ‘inveterate’ lies of the now pm, Boris Johnson. This first English edition includes a new preface exploring the future of post-Brexit Europe and Britain, and the uncertain implications of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

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introduction<br />

This illusory and harmful rejection of political competence<br />

and experience makes it difficult for politicians to govern since<br />

the people have become all-powerful or, to use a word invented<br />

<strong>by</strong> the French, a peuplecratie. 12 It is important to draw lessons<br />

from this for our democracies and for the European Union,<br />

which remains a relevant force on the world stage, more so given<br />

the risk that populists, who have been muted during management<br />

of the COVID pandemic, may well be waiting in the wings,<br />

ready to exploit the economic inequalities and frustrations to<br />

which the pandemic has given rise.<br />

At an internal level, the unity of the United Kingdom is<br />

under threat. The risk of Scotland seceding and Ireland reunifying<br />

is like an ever-present sword of Damocles. Scotland, which<br />

voted Remain, wanted to stay in the European Union at any<br />

cost. Brexit offers a new opportunity for a referendum on independence,<br />

more so in that relations between London and Edinburgh<br />

have deteriorated as a result of management of the health<br />

crisis. In <strong>Au</strong>gust 2020, a YouGov poll gave 53 per cent of Scots<br />

in favour of independence the first time (a figure to be treated<br />

with caution, naturally). 13 Ireland was the stumbling block for<br />

the negotiations under Theresa May since that is where the border<br />

with the EU lies, a border which must be subject to controls<br />

in order to prevent smuggling. There were two possible<br />

options here: a land border between the North and the South, or<br />

a border in the sea between Northern Ireland and Great Britain.<br />

Theresa May declared that no British prime minister could ever<br />

accept the latter option, which did not prevent Boris Johnson<br />

from agreeing to it in October 2019 in order to conclude the<br />

deal. It did not stop him from backtracking on the issue during<br />

subsequent negotiations with the European Union either.<br />

At an international level, Britain will need to overcome<br />

many contradictions in its dealings with other nations at a time<br />

when China, Russia, India or Turkey harbour dreams of empire<br />

under the leadership of strong men, when there is unilateralism<br />

in the United States and when global challenges are of primary<br />

33

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