Friday 11 May 2018

Week in Review: Total Brexit stalemate

"You may delay, but time will not" - Benjamin Franklin
View this email in your browser
From May 25th new EU regulations come into force and we won't be able to send you this email unless you resubscribe. Yes, we know. Those dastardly Europeans with their red tape. If you don't want to miss your Friday dose of politics and commentary, click the button below. Takes three seconds.
RE-SUBSCRIBE
Nothing is going on. You can leave the room of British politics without pausing it, go make a cup of tea, and it'll still be in the same place when you get back.
 
Theresa May has reached an impasse in the Cabinet. Idea one is staying in the customs union. She can't do that because the Brexiters will not accept it. Idea two is a customs partnership, which is either an invented system already rejected by the EU or a sneaky rebranding on customs union membership - no-one is quite sure, including probably herself. She can't do this because the Brexiters will not accept it either. Idea three is a so-called 'maximum facilitation' model, which is basically a fancy name for using smartphone apps to not check lorries at the border. She can't do that because Cabinet moderates and the EU won't accept it. She's stuck. 
 
Nearly every day there is a newspaper report saying that May's team or some other minister have a new plan to move things along, and that new plan always involves delaying things. The latest wheeze is to have May divide the Cabinet into two groups - you'll remember this from school - and have them duke out the differences between the partnership and 'max-fac' systems. But of course this involves pointing out the problems with the models, which are legion, and that will invariably lead to her saying both need more work, which was itself what the government was saying last summer when it released its original position paper on the subject. And that then means she'll have to delay again. It's political purgatory.
 
Both sides of this fantasy-land debate have their own delaying tactics. Former May aide Nick Timothy, who supports the 'max-fac' model, is suggesting that they could perhaps extend the transition period to get it all set up. In truth, they'd need to extend it by about eight further years and join the single market if it was to have any chance of success, but that is a level of objective reality he is not yet ready for. Nevertheless, the fact hard Brexiters are starting to acknowledge what all experts are saying - that a two-year transition is clearly not enough time - is worth noting. Wherever you look, delay is the only inspiration.
 
Over in parliament, nothing is also happening. Commons leader Andrea Leadsom has given no timings for the return of the EU withdrawal bill from the Lords, or indeed any news on any of the other Brexit bills. The 14 Lords amendments aren't being brought to the Commons because the government is afraid it will lose. Plus it is quite hard to whip MPs into a position when the Cabinet cannot agree on one.
 
So Cabinet cannot reach a decision because it does not know what it is doing and parliament is not allowed to scrutinise legislation because the government cannot trust that it will do the right thing even though it doesn't know what that is. And all the while Brussels sits there waiting, as the Article 50 clock ticks remorselessly down.
 
We have all become slowly accustomed to this level of ideological and practical ineptitude. But in the future, historians will marvel at how the government was allowed to behave this way with comparatively little outrage, given the scale of the inadequacy.

Latest Articles


Lords vote: No place left for Corbyn to hide



On May 9, 2018 9:44 AM
Yesterday's vote was shocking. Just before 8pm, the House of Lords defeated the government by 245 votes to 218 and demanded that Britain stays in the single market. Eighty-three Labour peers resisted Jeremy Corbyn's demand that they abstain - nearly half the party's backbenchers.
Read more... »
 

Glimmer of light: Could Sajid Javid make a difference on drug policy?



On May 11, 2018 7:59 AM
The first time I met the new home secretary was when he came to my house. Sajid Javid is our local MP and he came over to hear the story of how two of our sons had been killed by heroin. It was 2015.
Read more... »
 

Voter ID: This trial fixed nothing but Tory election fortunes



On May 11, 2018 7:48 AM
There was rightly a storm last week when it emerged that nearly 4,000 people were denied the right to vote following the pilot of an ID scheme at a handful of polling stations.
Read more... »
 

It's time for a Lib Dem - Green party merger




On May 10, 2018 8:48 AM
An alliance between the Green party and the Liberal Democrats may seem like an absurd proposition. For what reason would the Greens, who've historically been to the left, want to offer their support to a political party which propped up the Conservatives as they implemented an austerity programme? 
Read more... »


This is what the hostile environment did to asylum seekers



On May 8, 2018 7:47 AM
The Windrush scandal is a stain on our national conscience and there has rightly been a great deal of political handwringing and moral outrage. 
Read more... »

 

Opinion Former videos

 
 

Planning for people



On May 9, 2018 11:33 AM
The English planning system is under review. This video explains the issues and loopholes that lie in the current (and proposed) planning policy. It describes how we'd like to shape it to work for local people and the countryside, rather than to profit developers.
Read more... »
 

Rural communities denied affordable housing as developers exploit loophole



On Mar 5, 2018 11:35 AM
This animation, from the CPRE, highlights that England hasn't built enough genuinely affordable homes in rural or urban areas for decades.
Read more... »

 

Opinion Formers articles

 

Construction start for Stockport bridge

Work has begun to deliver a new road bridge over the River Mersey in Stockport, which is due to open to traffic next year.
Read more... »

 

Opinion Formers press releases

 

Digital thinking to cut down on rail closures

Bank Holiday blockades of train lines to allow for engineering could soon be consigned to history with the advent of the 'digital railway', a conference heard yesterday.
Read more... »
 

BASC gives city children a taste of the countryside

BASC representatives spoke to children and teachers at a farm run by the charity Farms for City Children about wildlife management and the role of the gamekeeper.
Read more... »

 

Facebook
Facebook
Twitter
Twitter
Website
Website
Unsubscribe or Manage your subscription preferences

Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

Copyright © 2018 Politics.co.uk, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
Senate Media Ltd
51-53 Mount Pleasant,
London,
WC1X 0AE

No comments:

Post a Comment