Divining the UK's national interest : MPs' parliamentary discourse and the Brexit withdrawal process
Judge, David and Shephard, Mark (2023) Divining the UK's national interest : MPs' parliamentary discourse and the Brexit withdrawal process. British Politics, 18 (4). pp. 579-602. ISSN 1746-918X (https://doi.org/10.1057/s41293-022-00217-8)
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Abstract
This article tracks, investigates and explains the discursive deployment of ‘national interest’ by UK MPs in parliamentary debates during the Brexit withdrawal process. Whilst the concept of ‘national interest’ has variously been dismissed as meaningless or devoid of substantive content, the discursive practices and deliberative contestations as to its meaning have been central to the historic role and purpose of the national legislature. Yet, the 2016 Brexit referendum, with its avowed intent of delegating the determination of the UK’s national interest to the electorate, in many respects short-circuited this historic role. Through a qualitative content analysis of the text of 122 distinct parliamentary deliberative occurrences over the period from June 2016 to January 2020 this article examines how MPs sought to reconstitute and recycle the notion of ‘national interest’ during the Brexit withdrawal process. It does so by examining discursive competition over ‘national interest’ in the issue arenas of constitutional process, representational mode, inter-institutional mode, and substantive policy. ‘National interest’ was invoked 640 times in Brexit-related debates with the expression of positive or negative sentiment found to be associated significantly with: the personal voting pattern of major party MPs in the 2016 referendum; party differences in the articulation of individualistic or party representational modes to reach Brexit decisions; differences between frontbench ministers and non-ministers; and party differences in assessment of the UK government’s iterated withdrawal negotiations with the EU.
ORCID iDs
Judge, David and Shephard, Mark ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5350-4734;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 82221 Dates: DateEventDecember 2023Published3 September 2022Published Online10 August 2022AcceptedSubjects: Political Science > Political science (General) Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Government and Public Policy > Politics Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 06 Sep 2022 11:35 Last modified: 17 Nov 2024 01:22 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/82221