The Leave camp has responded to Barack Obama’s imminent visit to Britain by accusing him of hypocrisy – not addressing the arguments the US president is expected to make about why America values our EU membership.
This isn’t an isolated case of shooting the messenger not the message. Instead of rebutting points made by pro-European voices, the sceptics frequently accuse them of scaremongering and meddling.
For example:
On Obama’s visit to the UK
“A piece of outrageous and exorbitant hypocrisy” – Boris Johnson
After the IMF warned how Brexit could harm the economy
“Consistently wrong in past forecasts about the UK and other countries” – Vote Leave
When a CBI survey showed members wanted to stay in EU
“Consistently misrepresented the views of business” – Matthew Elliott, Vote Leave chief executive
After a similar survey by the EEF, the manufacturers’ organisation
“Does not speak for British business” – Vote Leave
When French economy minister Emmanuel Macron said Brexit could jeopardise cooperation with UK on migration
“Blackmail” – David Davis MP
Following actress Emma Thompson’s call for the UK to remain in EU
“Overpaid Leftie luvvie” – Stewart Jackson MP
Finally, Dominic Cummings, Vote Leave’s campaign director, came up with a torrent of ad hominem attacks in his evidence yesterday to parliament:
- The Bank of England and its governor, Mark Carney, are “scaremongering”
- Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan are bribing Brussels
- The Treasury is incompetent, while its officials are “charlatans squeezing snake oil from economic models”.
The prevalence of the Leave camp’s practice of attacking the person not the argument suggests it is not confident in its counter-arguments.