Thursday 12 July 2018

Brexit chaos - the Tory Party is devouring itself


Brexit may destroy the Conservative Party


10 July, 2018


Brexit chaos continues to engulf Westminster. David Davis and Boris Johnson have resigned, along with a number of minor Conservative figures. The long awaited Brexiteer rebellion may finally have begun. And it could be fatal for the Tory Party.


It’s hard to underestimate the trouble the Conservative Party is in right now. In the abnormal political atmosphere, two senior cabinet ministers jumping ship is not enough to trigger a leadership challenge. But this should not re-assure Theresa May or her allies. Two facts stand out: firstly, Davis represents the hard Brexit arm of the party; his resignation is a sign that May is losing the argument with that section of her party. Secondly, Boris Johnson resigned for purely political purposes. If Johnson ever had principles, he long abandoned them in favour of personal ambition. If Davis was out, Johnson had to be out, too. How else could he position himself as an alternative prime minister?


The Conservative Party is more divided than ever. The Chequers summit was supposed to produce unity. Instead, it has caused a schism in the governing party. Divisions that were previously like a tug of war between factions have grown into a gaping chasms between former Leavers and former Remainers. May’s cabinet is now almost entirely made up of ex-Remainer – the long-held nightmare of hard line Brexiteers.



May herself must be hunkered down in No.10. Her performance in the House of Commons on Monday was weak and strained. As usual, she batted away awkward questions. But there was something different in the prime minister’s behaviour yesterday, and it was not triumph at purging her enemies. When Conservative Sir Peter Bone claimed that his local activists felt betrayed by the Chequers agreement, his fellow Tories tried to shout him down. Nonetheless, the accusation stuck and May’s response was both inadequate and quietly dismissive of the grassroots Bone was discussing. This is not the behaviour of a leader comfortable in her own authority.


This crisis is the Brexit fantasy coming home to roost. David Davis was one of the chief ideologues of a win-win Brexit. He and Boris Johnson consistently pushed the idea that Brexit would be a huge success with no downsides. In an interview following his resignation, Davis chided the EU leaders as though they were petulant children. The depth of the Brexit delusion is finally catching up with the Tories. Brexit means compromise and Brexit means pain. Davis and Johnson couldn’t accept that, and neither will Conservative grassroots who bought into the fantasy.


Theresa May has never been weaker and rumours of a leadership challenge are swirling. However, a new leader would make no difference. The economic, political and legal realities of leaving the EU remain the same regardless of who leads the Conservative Party. If a Brexiteer ideologue like Davis or Johnson becomes prime minister, it becomes far more likely that Britain will crash out of the EU in March 2019 with no deal. That will split the Tories and split the country. A hard line Brexit leader will not be able to unite the Conservatives any more than May has been able to. And if May survives, or a new leader pursues a soft Brexit, the Brexit fringe will continue to fight tooth and nail against the leadership. It will be Tory civil war without end.
May has already warned her MPs about the dangers of handing power to Jeremy Corbyn. The very real threat of a Labour victory in any snap election hasn’t managed to unite the Conservative Party behind their leader or any coherent Brexit plan. The Brexit-supporting press is sounding warnings that Brexit is being ‘stolen’ and democracy ‘ignored’. It is difficult to see how any Conservative leader can heal the divisions in the party without delivering a successful Brexit that pleases everyone. Since it’s now clear Brexit cannot be successful, and that a Brexit that protects the British economy from disaster can’t please the hard liners, the Tories are in a impossible position.
Theresa May should call a general election and let the people judge her handling of Brexit negotiations. If it is the will of the people that she should continue leading the country, so be it. But even if the Tories win a snap election, the divisions will remain. It’s difficult to see how the Conservative Party can survive Brexit without flying apart at the seams.


REMARKABLE VIDEO – MERKEL’S FACE TELLS STORY AS MAY BLOCKS PRESS QUESTION RE #CHEQUERSDEAL

11 July, 2018

Theresa May is clearly desperate to preserve any remaining shred of credibility she can cling to – but this evening her desperate attempt to do so gave away the game and showed there is none.

May was speaking at a press conference at the Balkans Summit in London, alongside German Chancellor Angela Merkel, when a reporter tried to ask Merkel what she thought of May’s ‘Chequers deal’ that tore apart her Cabinet, has Brexiteers vowing to defeat her in votes until they get their way and saw a large number of MPs send letters of no confidence in her to the senior Tory committee.

Remarkably, May intercepted the question and refused to let Merkel speak – to loud laughter from the German side as the Chancellor’s face spoke volumes



Comment:

All May achieved was to make herself look ridiculous – and Merkel’s opinion must be dim indeed for her to go to such humiliating lengths to keep it from the UK public.

The Chancellor made that more than clear by her wry smile.


Downfall of Theresa May approaches, as UK enters political meltdown (Video)


the Duran


As if the resignations of David Davis, Steve Baker and Boris Johnson were not enough of a headache for the troubled UK Prime Minister, a new poll shows that the British public is turing sharply against Prime Minster Theresa May on her Brexit negotiation debacle.

This was the inevitable outcome when May decided to turn her back on a democratically elected mandate to leave the EU, and instead deceptively try to negotiate a back door association agreement with Brussels.

Prime Minister May is handing the British populace all the bloated controls and regulations built into EU membership, without having a seat at the table in Brussels so as to affect those very controls and regulations levied on the UK people.

The Duran’s Alex Christoforou, RT CrossTalk host Peter Lavelle, and Editor-in-Chief Alexander Mercouris discuss what was a wild turn of events in British politics, which may see the eventual fall of the May government, a split in Tory loyalties, and the rise of Labour’s Jeremy Corbyn.


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