Brexit blues: From Wetherspoon to Next, the company bosses who loved Leave until reality hit. To say Brexit was one of the most divisive issues in recent British history would be an understatement.Battle lines were drawn between Leave and Remain before the historic 2016 vote that led to the UK - eventually - tumbling out of the EU.
But six years on, reality is kicking in and some of the most ardent Brexiteers - including the heads of major UK employers - are starting to change their tune.
From immigration overhauls to drastic travel changes, some who ardently campaigned to exit the bloc, are now declaring “this is not the Brexit we wanted.”
We look at some of the more vocal Leavers who have aired their frustrations, and perhaps did not get what they wanted.
Next’s Lord Simon WolfsonLord Simon Wolfson, who was a prominent advocate of Brexit, now says the UK’s current immigration policy is holding back economic growth.
The retail boss said firms should pay a tax to employ foreign workers, to encourage them to recruit from the UK first.
Lord Wolfson told the BBC: “We have got people queuing up to come to this country to pick crops that are rotting in fields, to work in warehouses that otherwise wouldn’t be operable, and we’re not letting them in.
“And we have to take a different approach to economically productive migration.”
In a comment piece in The Times during the Leave campaign, Lord Wolfson said Britain needed to “place its trust in the endeavour of Britain’s 30 million-strong workforce.”
The peer is now calling for the British government to open up its borders to more workers from overseas.
JD Wetherspoons’ Tim MartinTim Martin campaigned for a hard Brexit, including leaving the single market and the end of freedom of movement which came with it.
Fast forward to 2021, and he urged former prime minister Boris Johnson to create a “reasonably liberal” visa scheme to encourage foreign workers to relocate to the UK.
During the referendum, the Wetherspoon boss warned that remaining in the EU would lead to “significant adverse economic consequences” and labelled those warning of the economic damage that cutting ties with our biggest and closest trading partner would bring as “doomsters.”
Arguing for a no-deal Brexit in 2019, Mr Martin said: “I have argued that the UK – and therefore Wetherspoon – will benefit from a free-trade approach, by avoiding a ‘deal’ which involves the payment of £39bn to the EU.”
In October, the company posted losses of £30 million as it struggled to get back on track after the pandemic
The business is facing “a momentous challenge” to persuade pubgoers back into its bars after they got used to drinking cheap supermarket beer during Covid, the company’s boss has said.
Patisserie Valerie’s Luke JohnsonLuke Johnson, chairman of bakery chain Patisserie Valerie and former head of Pizza Express, was another figure who supported Brexit but was less impressed by the reality once it happened.
Speaking on a panel discussion on the Today programme in August, he said Brexit had been a “disappointment.”
Mr Johnson was a vocal supporter for Brexit saying the decision to leave the EU would see British businesses prosper in the new environment.
But when asked about the impact of Brexit on the UK economy, he admitted that it has cost us growth before adding: “I think however if we spent our lives punishing ourselves and refighting the last war over Brexit we're not going to make progress.”
But while he said Brexit had created issues for trade, he was confident the problems could be overcome and the situation with shortages of foreign workers wasn't as bad as reported.
Bosses who back Brexit - then moved residency to another countrySir James Dyson and Sir Jim Ratcliffe both came in for criticism after moving their residencies out of the UK after supporting Brexit.
When Dyson boss, Sir James announced in 2019 his firm would move its global headquarters to Singapore from Britain, he was accused of hypocrisy. Previously he had argued in the run-up to the Brexit referendum that the UK would gain more from leaving the EU than it would lose.
However, in a later interview with the BBC, he said: “We're a British company - I've put a lot into this country.
“I can't make things here and bring over all the components from the Far East here, assemble them here and then send them back to the Far East. That just doesn't work.”
In 2021 he switched his residency back to the UK.
In 2020 Sir Jim Ratcliffe, the UK’s richest person and high-profile Brexiteer, changed his tax residency from Hampshire to tax-free Monaco.
In the run-up to the Leave vote, Sir Jim offered vocal support to the campaign saying: “The Brits are perfectly capable of managing the Brits and don’t need Brussels telling them how to manage things.”
The former Liberal Democrat leader Sir Vince Cable described the petrochemical boss’ move as “deeply cynical”.
“The idea we should be dishing out knighthoods to people who have no commitment to this country is rather shameful,” he said.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/brexit-blues-from-wetherspoon-to-next-the-company-bosses-who-loved-leave-until-reality-hit/ar-AA140g5E?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=8bef4e2f5ceb452da93226e8a261e426
Comments
https://uk.yahoo.com/news/brexit-major-cause-uk-return-153508952.html
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-63623502
Very worrying
Indeed, & plenty more pain incoming.
In 2016 I was amazed how anyone could think Brexit was a good idea, and fast forward to almost 2023 and it's quite evident it's been national suicide.
Worse is still to come.
This was a judgement call way too serious to be handed to the nation, who have proven time and again how thick they are by repeatedly voting in the Tories and believing slogans on a bus.
https://uk.yahoo.com/news/hows-brexit-going-british-politics-105359219.html
https://uk.yahoo.com/news/brexit-rejoining-eu-takes-record-115811433.html
https://uk.yahoo.com/news/uk-turning-against-brexit-tories-152023907.html
Mark Carney defends claim UK economy has shrunk from 90% size of Germany's to 70% since Brexit
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/mark-carney-doubles-down-on-claim-that-brexit-has-shrunk-uk-economy-uk-politics-live/ar-AA13JuMc?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=c06f5e345d2840a48be6ba210decb848
Former environment secretary Theresa Villiers, who backed Brexit in 2016, told the Observer that the proposals would take up vast amounts of civil service time and would involve undoing legislation that, in many cases, was broadly popular and good for the country.
Other senior Tories are growing concerned that the EU retained law bill, championed by Jacob Rees-Mogg before Rishi Sunak sacked him on becoming prime minister, is in danger of becoming an ideological millstone.
https://uk.yahoo.com/news/rees-mogg-plans-axe-eu-070014674.html
https://uk.yahoo.com/news/labour-reverse-not-reversing-brexit-100017444.html
Cabinet minister Chris Heaton-Harris risked a backlash over Brexit on Thursday when he claimed the authors of the Northern Ireland Protocol did not understand the impact it would have.
In another admission, City grandee Lord Wolfson, who backed leaving the EU, urged the Government to relax migration rules to ease staff shortages, saying “in respect of immigration it’s definitely not the Brexit I wanted”.
https://uk.yahoo.com/news/brexiteer-minister-claims-impact-ni-111430295.html
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/cheesemaker-sells-firm-to-overcome-brexit-barriers-after-losing-600-000-in-sales/ar-AA147dRT?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=164af6ffed8a4d168fc3756a7d78311e
Businessman who Boris Johnson called 'that bl00dy cheese man' sells company after Brexit woes
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/businessman-who-boris-johnson-called-that-****-cheese-man-sells-company-after-brexit-woes/ar-AA1475d5?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=164af6ffed8a4d168fc3756a7d78311e
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/brexit-trade-deal-with-australia-not-very-good-admits-ex-cabinet-minister/ar-AA146C4Q?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=164af6ffed8a4d168fc3756a7d78311e
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/brexit-plans-for-costly-new-tests-on-goods-before-sale-shelved-in-another-u-turn/ar-AA145VE4?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=00e2081afb0349e5a19c4ae31356e0b7
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/newslondon/obr-brexit-has-had-significant-adverse-impact-on-uk-trade/ar-AA14dPTs?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=48e51da8616940cba246d219ae4b7297
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/money/other/zurich-insurance-to-move-holding-company-from-ireland-due-to-brexit/ar-AA14eHhK?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=9b2309514de146978df2d5c0b7440f1f
He said: “Brexit is a factor. The two main parties are not talking about it. But we are talking about it, and BBC journalists are starting to question politicians about it. And it’s about time we got it out in the open.
“We had a vote, we had a marginal decision in favour of leaving, whatever that meant. It meant lots of different things to different people. But Brexit ... it’s a disaster. It’s a disaster for our economy.
“Growth is not a new thing. We need to grow and we need to export, and we need to export to our biggest and most obvious market, which is just over 20 miles away and across the Channel.”
Atkins argued there hadn’t been time to have an “objective assessment of Brexit on our economy”, and made international comparisons to spare the UK economy’s blushes that have already been debunked by the BBC.
https://uk.yahoo.com/news/bbc-time-tory-minister-shut-052132124.html
https://uk.yahoo.com/news/jacob-rees-mogg-confronts-krishnan-guru-murthy-084226083.html
https://video.dailymail.co.uk/preview/mol/2022/11/20/8692037285439816663/308x174_MP4_8692037285439816663.mp4
Government sources have been signalling that Switzerland's relationship with the bloc could be a model for the UK over the next decade. However, despite claims free movement would not return there are fears the UK could end up accepting EU law, paying into Brussels coffers and facing higher immigration. Health Secretary Steve Barclay tried to pour cold water on the reports in the Sunday Times this morning, telling Sky News' Ridge on Sunday programme: 'I do not support that. I want to maximise the opportunities that Brexit offers.' Mr Barclay pointed out that Mr Sunak himself was a strong Brexiteer. Tory MPs warned against a 'betrayal' of the 2016 referendum result.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11449227/New-Tory-Brexit-civil-war-ministers-warn-NOT-Swiss-style-ties.html