March 21, 2019 How Theresa May Botched Brexit Those were the times ...

bigger The Times page 1 is of January 18, 2017. Negotiations between the United Kingdom and the European Union about Brexit were just beginning. The "you'll be crushed" arrogance in the headline characterizes the attitude the British government under May demonstrated during the talks. Recently that attitude has somewhat changed. This screenshot was taken about an hour ago:

bigger The BBC writes: Theresa May has said she "sincerely hopes" the UK will leave the EU with a deal and she is still "working on" ensuring Parliament's agreement. Arriving in Brussels, she said that she had "personal regret" over her request to delay Brexit, but said it will allow time for MPs to make a "final choice". At the EU summit the PM spoke to the other 27 leaders to try to get their backing for a delay beyond 29 March. Meanwhile, Jeremy Corbyn said his talks in Brussels were "very constructive". BBC Brussels correspondent Adam Fleming said Mrs May spoke to EU leaders for 90 minutes and was asked several times what her contingency plans were if she lost the third "meaningful vote" on her deal in Parliament. French President Emmanuel Macron has warned that if MPs vote down Mrs May's EU withdrawal agreement next week, the UK will leave without a deal. May asked the EU to move the hard coded March 29 Brexit date to June 30. She may be given May 23, the day of EU elections, as a compromise but only if her deal passes the British parliament. A no-deal crash out on March 29 would create utter chaos for months. It would be catastrophic for Britain's economy. May's withdrawal agreement was already voted down twice. If it comes to a third vote in parliament it is very likely to fail again. Yves Smith, who you should all read, opens her Brexit sit rep today with this: We’ve been more pessimistic than most commentators about the likelihood of the UK escaping the default of a no-deal Brexit. We may not have been pessimistic enough. There is still the possibility that May takes a 180 degree turn, but that would be the end of her career and likely also the end of the Conservative Party: Now there is a popular push for an Article 50 revocation, with a petition already at over 400,000 signatures as of this hour. But as we’ll discuss, May would have to do a complete reversal to revoke Article 50, which is within her power, not just a Prime Minister, but also implementing the motion by Parliament rejecting a no-deal Brexit. Article 50 is the part of the British withdrawal law that governs the Brexit process. If May revokes it, there is little chance that another Brexit attempt will ever be made. The majority that voted to leave the EU will have been betrayed. An analysis by the BBC Europe editor says that the "Leaders want to avoid no-deal Brexit": [W]hile EU leaders have ruled out re-opening the Brexit withdrawal agreement and the "backstop" text, you can bet they'll discuss a longer Brexit delay at their summit today. This is, in my view, a misjudgment. Yes, under normal circumstances and with a competent and trustworthy negotiation partner on the British side, ways would be found to fudge the issue and to avoid a Brexit in all but its name. That is why I predicted long ago that Brexit was not gonna happen. But May has really done everything to affront the other side of the table. She did not stick to commitments she had given, delivered papers too late to properly discuss them, and came to emergency summits called on her behalf without anything new to offer. Matthew Parris, a conservative political commentator in London who originally favored May, now remarks of her: "She is mean. She is rude. She is cruel. She is stupid. I have heard that from almost everyone who has dealt with her," Parris says. He said he had never expected this much hatred, "and that is not a word I use lightly." The leaders of other EU countries also have had it with here. The voters on the continent do not care about Britain. There will be no punishment for Merkel or Macron for letting Britain crash out. The EU will survive without the United Kingdom. With a no-deal Brexit the United Kingdom is likely to fall apart. Within a few years North Ireland would join the Irish Republic, peacefully one hopes, and Scotland would vote to leave. A bit of hope may still rest in this one line in the BBC report which it leaves unexplained: Meanwhile, Jeremy Corbyn said his talks in Brussels were "very constructive". Is there a EU deal being made with the opposition leader and behind Theresa May's back? Given that she is the Prime Minister how would that work out? Posted by b on March 21, 2019 at 18:57 UTC | Permalink Comments next page » next page »