As of yet I have had precious little to say about Brexit. The
reason, quite simply, is that I have not put in the time and energy needed to
figure out what is going on in Once-Great Britain.
I have made a single exception to my rule of silence: I have
noted on several occasions that the person responsible for the debacle is Prime
Minister Theresa May. She is in charge. She must be held accountable for an
ungodly mess. We can add to the list a British conservative party that could not do
any better than May. And we all understand that the Labour Party is
its own special kind of calamity.
As it happens Anne Applebaum has been following the Brexit
mess closely. She draws a sensible and well-informed conclusion inn the
Washington Post: that Theresa May has failed miserably. I will offer Applebaum’s
views with a minimum of commentary:
She [May]
is not sensible, she does not know what she is doing, and, increasingly, she
doesn’t seem to be entirely sane either. Outside of Westminster, the extent of
May’s responsibility for this crisis might not be fully appreciated. But in
truth, almost everything about Brexit — from the nature of the deal she
negotiated to the divisions in her party and her country — is very much her
fault. The latest development — European leaders have told her that
the United Kingdom can have a Brexit extension until May 22, if May can get her
withdrawal agreement passed in Parliament, but must crash out of all of its
trading arrangements on April 12 if not — underlines this bitter truth. She is
not to be pitied: She is the worst prime minister in living memory, presiding
over a crisis of her own creation.
What errors did May make? For those who understand the
process, here is one:
She did
not have to trigger Article 50, the legal mechanism for leaving the European
Union, before making a plan on how to do so: That decision set a two-year clock
ticking and has resulted in the cliff edge the country would have reached on
the 29th of this month if an extension had not been granted. She did not have
to call an unnecessary parliamentary election in 2017, one which resulted in
the loss of her majority and forced her to rely on a small, radical, Protestant
Northern Irish political party, as well as the extreme anti-European faction
within her own party, in order to stay in power.
What were May’s other
errors?
Thanks
to Cameron’s simplistic, open-ended referendum question, they chose to “Leave”
the European Union but did not express any view on what should happen next.
When she took office, May could have observed that the vote was very close,
that Britain’s commercial and political ties to Europe were strong, and that it
would make sense for the United Kingdom to stay within the single market, the
pan-European free-trade zone that Britain itself did so much to create — or at
the very least within a customs union.
Instead,
she chose to leave both of those institutions, a decision that immediately
triggered the problem of the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic
of Ireland, which was eliminated thanks to E.U. trade treaties but will, if
customs barriers are put in place, need to be built back. Her decision also
created potential problems for anyone who trades with Britain or works with Britain
— and for Brits who trade and work in Europe.
As for her ability to work with others, a quality necessary
to any form of leadership, May lacks it. If one were to be churlish one would
note that women are supposed to be replete with this ability to work with
others, because they are chock full of empathy—witness the pathetic prime
minister of New Zealand, Jacinda Ardern—but apparently May has failed miserably
on that account too:
She
went on to alienate almost everyone else. Until this week, nearly three years
after the referendum, she made no effort to reach across the aisle and include
opposition parties in the planning for this momentous national change. Although
the E.U. has been entirely transparent about its negotiating goals from the
beginning, she kept hers secret. She tried, and failed, to prevent
parliamentary scrutiny of her deal. She does not respond to pleas, advice,
suggestions.
Of course, Applebaum concludes, other politicians have also
failed, but Theresa May gets the prize for incompetence:
Others
have contributed to this crisis. Cameron; the Labour opposition leader, Jeremy
Corbyn, who has not lifted a finger to offer a constructive solution; an
incompetent series of Tory ministers. But May is in charge, and she did not get
this job by accident. I once saw a photograph of her at university, wearing a
neat skirt and sensible shoes while everyone else had long hair and hippie
dresses. She has been doing conservative politics ever since then, and she has
wanted to be prime minister ever since then; she spent her whole life,
motivated by loyalty to the Tory party, training for this job. Now she has it —
and she has used it to steer her country into a humiliating crisis.
The
slogan of the “Leave” campaign, back in 2016, was “Take Back Control.” But
Europe has now taken back control of May’s botched Brexit. And however it ends,
it won’t be a success.
Here we go again, it is all somehow Theresa May's fault. No it is not and it never will be.
ReplyDeleteGreat Britain came late to the European Union, they never were very happy to join, because it would cost them their overseas trade, the ties with the Commomwealth for instance. And above all, because they were British. They joined reluctantly, they later opted out of the so-called Social Paragraph and without going into the reach of the Social Paragraph, that was wisdom aforesight.
Britain always had one hand on the doorknob, and with the referendum, someone gave it a final push. If the EU cared so much about its people, those of Britain included, they would have offered a deal that included trade on the same footing and a solution for the Backstop. But the EU does not care for its people, as is proven by its unwillingness to protect its borders and keep the continent safe. The EU supports Palestinians murderers to this day. Supports Iran. Claims that Putin is the enemy but still wants Russian gas. And so on.
It was a happy moment for many within the EU when Britain voted Leave. It showed that change is possible, and that the planned thousand-year empire of an ever closer union can be avoided after all.
“She [May] is not sensible, she does not know what she is doing, and, increasingly, she doesn’t seem to be entirely sane either. Outside of Westminster, the extent of May’s responsibility for this crisis might not be fully appreciated. But in truth, almost everything about Brexit — from the nature of the deal she negotiated to the divisions in her party and her country — is very much her fault. The latest development — European leaders have told her that the United Kingdom can have a Brexit extension until May 22, if May can get her withdrawal agreement passed in Parliament, but must crash out of all of its trading arrangements on April 12 if not — underlines this bitter truth. She is not to be pitied: She is the worst prime minister in living memory, presiding over a crisis of her own creation.”
ReplyDeleteWhen one of the greatest living historians says this about you, it might be time to consider plan B.
I agree, it is not all May's "fault". The EU-niks in Brussels, Berlin, and Paris were deeply insulted that the British rabble voted to leave the EU-topian Union, and they are doing their level best to punish the Brits for trying to get rid of their bureaucratic tar-baby.
ReplyDeleteHaving said that, they found a perfect mark in Teresa May, an incompetent PM and feckless negotiator who should have resigned months ago and given the job to someone capable of standing up to the idiots whose job description, apparently, includes classifying the curvature of cucumbers.
There is also the problem (as I understand it, and I could be wrong) that Tory MPs voted for staying when their voters voted FOR Brexit.
ReplyDeletetw, add in the "curvature of bananas". I recall reading a few years back that they like curved ones, but not the more straight ones.
ReplyDelete