The Brexit Culture War Is Finally Hitting Its Endgame

The December 12 election will determine whether Britain leaves the EU and how

Ian Dunt
GEN

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Credit: Peter Summers/Getty

FFour years of carnage. Brexit has been pulverizing British politics for so long that most of the people who live here can barely remember what it was like beforehand. Sometimes we reminisce about a period when politics was about other things, like health care or education policy. But it’s a distant memory which is increasingly hard to recall — like the face of someone you once knew in school.

That might finally be about to come to an end. Not the real end, of course. Brexit will never really end. It’s a permanent state of hellishness. Even if Britain leaves the EU, it’ll still face decades of trade deals and international negotiations. Even if it doesn’t, there’ll be years of political upheaval as the emotions triggered by it refuse to die down. We’re not at the end. But we might, if we’re lucky, be approaching the end of the beginning.

The prime minister, Boris Johnson, is going to hold a general election. On December 12, either he will win, or the other side will. And that decision will dictate how Britain leaves the EU, or if it even will at all.

It won’t be a normal election. It’ll be grounded in an intense sense of tribal warfare conducted on…

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Ian Dunt
GEN
Writer for

Editor of Politics.co.uk. Host on the Remainiacs podcast. Author of Brexit: What the Hell Happens Now? and How to be a Liberal, out in May 2020.