NOT ANOTHER THING: FOUR REFERENDUMS AND A BREXIT VOTE

Should we agree with Tom Peck that David Cameron was the “Worst Prime Minister in a Hundred Years?” (2016). Joseph Butler once stated that “Everything is what it is, and not another thing” and that “Things and actions are  what they are, and the consequences of them will be what they will be: why,  then, should we desire to be deceived?” (Butler, 1841: Pr eface; 76). The United Kingdom (UK) is now faced with the claim that “Brexit means Brexit” – a vacuous phrase which palpably begs the question at issue. For the issue is:  what is Brexit? and what type of Brexit was voted for? To say that “Brexit means Brex it” is whistling in the dark as a means to ward off unwelcome spirits  and to conjure up an appearance of resolve. This paper argues that the referendum on whether the UK should stay in the European Union was held by the then Prime Minister, David Cameron, to satisfy internal party critics and the campaign conducted in a manner inspired by his previous success in holding and winning referendums. Further, it argues that it has unleashed a new doctrine: that of the referendum result as an expression of the undiluted ‘will of the people’. The holding of the referendum, its conduct and its result  were direct results of complacency and hubris; what precisely a vote for Brexit means is unclear and ambiguous, and the populist belief that the result has to be upheld  because it expresses the ‘will of the people’ is both cause and  consequence of the referendum campaign and result.