Seven years ago, a group of Tory MPs published a book entitled Britannia Unchained that argued that Britain “rewards laziness”, that British workers were “the worst idlers in the world”, and that “too many people in Britain prefer a lie-in to hard work”. Businesses were deterred from hiring people, they claimed, because of employment laws that made them fear “taking a risk and hiring new staff”. The solution? Repealing those laws – or what should more accurately be described as rights. Three of the book’s authors are now in the cabinet: Priti Patel, Dominic Raab and Liz Truss.
Boris Johnson’s Brexit dream is to shred workers’ rights and social protections | Owen Jones | Opinion | The Guardian
Here's more on the book:
Britannia Unchained - Wikipedia
All five of the Britannia Unchained gang are now supporters of Boris
Johnson. They may be wincing at his scattergun spending pledges, but ...
Jul 7, 2019
But among such banal paraphernalia lies a copy of Britannia Unchained, a
free-market tract co-authored in 2012 by five recently-elected ...
Jul 24, 2019
Here's another book:
Rule Britannia | Biteback Publishing
(Mis)Rule Britannia: Brexit is the last gasp of empire | LSE BREXIT
With comment from the Guardian:
Who voted for Brexit:
Again and again, they have been characterised as “the left behind”: poor, neglected, Labour-inclined voters from the north of England. The reality that Brexit is essentially a rightwing project – to deregulate the British economy for the benefit of more hard-nosed, non-EU capitalism – has been largely obscured. Since 2016, a few dissenting academics, most prominently the Oxford University geographer Danny Dorling, have produced strong evidence that more Brexit voters were, in fact, prosperous Conservatives from southern England. But these interventions have hardly dented the conventional wisdom. From BBC vox pops to tabloid editorials to Labour shadow cabinet meetings, “left-behind” leavers still loom disproportionately large. Remainers have been unable to identify and promote a similarly marketable political cohort of their own.
The campaign to stop Brexit has never found the right words | Andy Beckett | Opinion | The Guardian
And more comment from its writer:
Danny Dorling News on Twitter: "More of the British working class did not vote at all, than voted to Leave. The majority of Leave voters were middle class. Most lived in the south of England. There is so much about Brexit that is not understood including simple statistics about the vote itself. All in this book… https://t.co/Mcm0OWb6Lx"
And it's also in the news:
And as we argued in a recent book,Rule Britannia: From Brexit to the end of
Empire , these echoes had a strong influence on why some of the ...
5 days ago
After all this time, these things are ingrained in the Brexit moment and
the ... By the time they were even aware of such things, the end of the
second ... as keen as them on the idea that Britannia could once again rule
the waves ... of camp, and the supposed glories of war and empire were
suddenly sent up?
1 week ago
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