SPEAKERS
Agata
Gostyńska-Jakubowska, Senior Research Fellow, Centre for European
Reform
Geoff Meade, Meade Davis
Communications
Fabian Zuleeg, Chief Executive, European
Policy Centre
The vote on 12 December is arguably the most important
election in the UK in decades. Its outcome is still uncertain – though the
Conservatives are leading in the polls by a clear margin, missteps on the
campaign trail and convincing campaigns by Labour or the Liberal Democrats
could, like in the last election in 2017, deny the government the parliamentary
majority it seeks. The importance of the election outcome can hardly be
overstated. It will determine the course of Brexit and thus lay the foundations
for the direction the UK will take in the coming decades. Voters will face a
stark choice between Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s vision of a hard Brexit, a
second referendum under Labour and the Liberal Democrats’ plan of remaining in
the EU. In Scotland, it will be a test for the support of the Scottish National
Party. What will the election result mean for Brexit and the longer-term
direction of the UK? If polarisation in parliament increases due to the
decisions by several moderate Conservative and Labour MPs to not stand again,
how will this affect policymaking on Brexit and other issues? How should the EU
react to the outcome?
At this Elections Monitor, Agata
Gostyńska-Jakubowska, Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for European Reform,
Geoff Meade of Meade Davis Communications and Fabian Zuleeg, Chief Executive at
the EPC, will analyse the outcome of the UK election and discuss its
implications for Brexit and the future of the UK.