Brexit
Vote Goes Against
Boris Johnson, and He Calls
for an Election
LONDON
— British lawmakers on Tuesday rose up against Prime Minister Boris
Johnson, moving to prevent him from taking the country out of the
European Union without a formal agreement. The epic showdown pushed
Britain to the verge of a new election.
3
September, 2019
After
losing his first-ever vote as prime minister, Mr. Johnson stood up in
Parliament and said he intended to present a formal request for a
snap general election to lawmakers, who would have to approve it.
A
little over a month ago, Mr. Johnson, a brash, blustery politician
often compared to President Trump, swept into office with a vow to
finally wrest Britain from the European Union by whatever means
necessary, even if it meant a disorderly, no-deal departure.
Now,
Parliament has pulled the rug out from under him, and Mr. Johnson is
at risk of falling into the same Brexit quagmire that dragged down
his predecessor as prime minister, Theresa May.
The
lawmakers forced his hand by voting by 328 to 301 to take control of
Parliament away from the government and vote on legislation as soon
as Wednesday that would block the prime minister from making good on
his threat of a no-deal Brexit.
That
prompted an angry response from the prime minister.
“I
don’t want an election, the public don’t want an election, but if
the House votes for this bill tomorrow, the public will have to
choose who goes to Brussels on Oct. 17 to sort this out and take this
country forward,” Mr. Johnson said, referring to the next European
Union summit.
Tuesday
was a critical moment in Britain’s tortured, three-year effort to
extract itself from the European Union. The saga has divided Britons,
torn apart the ruling Conservative Party and prompted complaints that
Mr. Johnson has trampled the conventions of the country’s unwritten
constitution.
A
majority of lawmakers are determined to block a withdrawal from the
European Union without a deal, which they believe would be disastrous
for the country’s economy. Tuesday’s vote suggested they have the
numbers to succeed.
Mr.
Johnson’s aides had made clear that, in the event of a defeat on
Tuesday, he would seek a general election on Oct. 14 — just a
little over two weeks before the Brexit deadline of Oct. 31.
In
his rebuttal to Mr. Johnson’s call for elections, the opposition
leader, Jeremy Corbyn, said he would agree to an election only after
Parliament passed legislation barring a no-deal Brexit. The House of
Commons is expected to approve the measure on Wednesday.
Tuesday’s
vote marked a moment when Mr. Johnson’s hardball tactics, for once,
were met with equal resistance.
On
a day of high drama, Mr. Johnson lost his working majority in
Parliament even before the vote took place, when one Conservative
rebel, Phillip Lee, quit the party to join the Liberal Democrats, who
have managed to stage a resurgence by positioning themselves as an
unambiguously anti-Brexit party.
The
practical effect of Mr. Lee’s defection for Mr. Johnson was
limited, however, because the government would fall only if it were
defeated in a confidence motion.
But
in a moment weighty with symbolism, Mr. Lee walked across the floor
of the House of Commons and sat beside Jo Swinson, the leader of the
Liberal Democrats, as the prime minister was speaking about the
recent Group of 7 summit. Mr. Lee accused Mr. Johnson of pursuing a
damaging withdrawal from the European Union in unprincipled ways, and
of “putting lives and livelihoods at risk.”
Mr.
Lee’s break with the Tories was most likely just the first of many.
On
Tuesday night, Downing Street began pressing ahead with plans to
discipline those rebels who voted against the government, moving to
expel them from the Conservative Party in Parliament. Those who
defied the government included two former chancellors of the
Exchequer, Philip Hammond and Kenneth Clarke, and Nicholas Soames,
the grandson of Winston Churchill.
That
could threaten Mr. Johnson’s ability to manage day-to-day business
in Parliament, underscoring the need for a new election.
The
extent of the Tory civil war was on full display as several of Mr.
Johnson’s Conservative critics, including the former chancellor of
the Exchequer, Philip Hammond, lobbed hostile questions at him,
making it plain that they had not been brought back into line by
threats of expulsion from the party.
Opponents
of a no-deal Brexit argue that Mr. Johnson’s promise to leave the
bloc without a deal, if necessary, would be catastrophic for the
British economy. Many experts say it could lead to shortages of food,
fuel and medicine, and wreak havoc on parts of the manufacturing
sector that rely on the seamless flow of goods across the English
Channel. Leaked government reports paint a bleak picture of what it
might look like.
Mr.
Johnson says he needs to keep the no-deal option on the table to give
him leverage in talks in Brussels, because an abrupt exit would also
damage continental economies, if not as much as Britain’s. The
prime minister appealed to his own lawmakers not to support what he
called “Jeremy Corbyn’s surrender bill,” a reference to the
leader of the opposition Labour Party.
“It
means running up the white flag,” he said.
Mr.
Johnson also claimed to have made progress in talks with European
Union leaders, although his own Brexit secretary, Stephen Barclay, on
Monday gave a much less rosy assessment of the state of negotiations.
Britain’s
main demand is for the European Union to ditch the so-called Irish
backstop, a guarantee that the bloc insists it needs to ensure that
goods flow smoothly across the Irish border whatever happens in trade
negotiations with Britain. Mr. Johnson said he planned to visit
Dublin next week for talks with his Irish counterpart, Leo Varadkar.
Conservative
rebels believe Mr. Johnson is more interested in uniting Brexit
supporters behind him ahead of a general election than in securing an
agreement in Brussels.
One
former chancellor of the Exchequer, Kenneth Clarke, accused Mr.
Johnson of setting impossible conditions for the negotiations,
attaching as much blame as possible to the European Union for the
failure to get a deal and then seeking to hold a “flag-waving
election” before the disadvantages of leaving without an agreement
become apparent.
The
bitter dispute has taken Britain into new political territory.
Last
week, Mr. Johnson provoked outrage by curtailing Parliament’s
sessions in September and October, compacting the amount of time
lawmakers would have to deal with the most crucial decision the
country has faced in decades.
Mr.
Johnson’s allies argue that it is the rebels who are subverting the
principles of Britain’s unwritten constitution by seizing control
of the proceedings of Parliament that are normally the preserve of
the government.
The
European Commission said on Tuesday that while the frequency of
meetings between its Brexit team and the British negotiator, David
Frost, had increased, little headway had been made toward avoiding a
hard border between Ireland and Northern Ireland.
Asked
whether the British government was using reports of its talks with
the commission for political purposes at home, the commission’s
spokeswoman, Mina Andreeva, said that the body was “an honest
broker, as always.” She said she could not “report any concrete
proposals having being made that we have seen.”
Mr.
Hammond, a senior member of the cabinet two months ago, told the BBC
on Tuesday that Mr. Johnson’s claim of progress on the negotiations
was “disingenuous.”
To
add to the turmoil and confusion, the opposition Labour Party
suggested it might thwart Mr. Johnson’s attempt to push for a
general election, should it come to that. Under a 2011 law, the prime
minister needs a two-thirds majority to secure a snap election,
although it is possible that the government might try to legislate to
set that provision aside, a move that would mean it needs only a
simply majority.
There
is so little trust in British politics that Mr. Johnson’s opponents
fear that he might request an election for Oct. 14 but then switch
the date until after Oct. 31 as part of a move to lock in a no-deal
withdrawal.
Labour
has said that its priority is to stop Britain leaving the European
Union without a deal, because of concerns about what such a departure
would mean for the economy.
But
Labour’s stance underscores that the backdrop to everything in
British politics is a sense that a general election is looming, with
key players maneuvering for the most advantageous moment.
It really does seem as if it is Parliament vs the People, with Boris placing himself as a Populist
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-eu-poll-idUSKCN1UM0NR?fbclid=IwAR1BxGE2CkbqzQMqF6Tj3zLOePq484zVRpl2Tm9Vmn5-8cCQMiDJE1L1zfs
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