HomeNewsWorldBoris Johnson may be fading out, but not the divisions he stoked

Boris Johnson may be fading out, but not the divisions he stoked

Boris Johnson’s legacy and that of Brexit are inseparable.

July 10, 2022 / 12:49 IST
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FILE — Boris Johnson, the former mayor of London, on a bus while campaigning ahead of the vote to stay in or leave the European Union, in Preston, England, June 1, 2016. Long after British Prime Minister Johnson is gone, his successors will be wrestling over his signature project, Brexit, and the insoluble issues it raised. (Adam Ferguson/The New York Times)
FILE — Boris Johnson, the former mayor of London, on a bus while campaigning ahead of the vote to stay in or leave the European Union, in Preston, England, June 1, 2016. Long after British Prime Minister Johnson is gone, his successors will be wrestling over his signature project, Brexit, and the insoluble issues it raised. (Adam Ferguson/The New York Times)

The swift, stinging downfall of Boris Johnson this past week removes a uniquely polarizing figure from British politics. But it does not remove the divisive issues that Johnson confronted — and in many cases, exploited — as he engineered Britain’s departure from the European Union 2 1/2 years ago.

Johnson’s legacy and that of Brexit are inseparable. Britons will be wrestling with the fallout from his signature project long after their flamboyant prime minister decamps Downing Street, taking with him his heedless disregard for the rules, checkered ethical history and slapdash personal style.

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From Britain’s poisoned relationship with France to its clash with Brussels over trade in Northern Ireland, Brexit-related issues will loom large in the campaign to replace Johnson as leader of the Conservative Party and, hence, prime minister. They could well define the next occupant of Downing Street, the fourth prime minister since Britain voted to leave in 2016.

Narrowing the divide between Britain’s wealthy south and poorer north — Johnson’s marquee post-Brexit initiative — is major unfinished business. Even broader economic problems, like surging inflation and a looming recession, have a Brexit component, insofar as Britain’s divorce from Brussels has aggravated its woes.