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Celerity

(46,535 posts)
Wed Sep 9, 2020, 06:56 AM Sep 2020

Brexit: Little lies have long legs

https://fedtrust.co.uk/brexit-little-lies-have-long-legs/



One of the more optimistic interpretations placed by some commentators on Boris Johnson’s crushing victory in the General Election last year was that his new large majority would make it easier for him to negotiate rapidly and effectively with the European Union in 2020. His large majority, it was hoped, would allow him to ignore the most extreme demands for these negotiations from the most extreme of his backbenchers in the European Research Group (ERG). The government’s willingness, announced brazenly in the House of Commons yesterday, illegally to break the terms of the Withdrawal Agreement (WA) with the EU, should be a salutary corrective to such illusions.

In truth, the ERG has never gone away. Its ideas and attitudes have long since become those of the vast majority of active members of the Conservative Party, an essential factor in the undermining of Theresa May. It would be impossible for Boris Johnson, even if he wished to, to take disciplinary action against the ERG’s members in the same way as he did last year against Ken Clarke, Dominic Grieve and other pro-Europeans. The ERG and its ideas enjoy limitless access to the columns of the newspapers read by Conservatives. Major television channels give substantial coverage and credibility to such views and their proponents. Even more importantly, the Conservative Parliamentary Party contains today only a handful of uncowed MPs who would have the conviction and confidence to take any effective stand against the radically Eurosceptic policies advocated by the ERG. Central among these policies is the repudiation or at least revision of the Withdrawal Agreement which was according to Johnson himself so decisive an element of the last General Election. The admission of Sir Brandon Lewis that the government was prepared to break international law in its incorporation of the WA into British domestic law is a clear and reprehensible first response to this mounting pressure from the ERG.

Why did the ERG accept the Withdrawal Agreement?

It was surprising to some observers that Boris Johnson was able last year to persuade the most implacable Eurosceptics in his Party that they should accept the Withdrawal Agreement he had negotiated. It was after all, essentially the Agreement negotiated by the despised Theresa May, with the addition of a regulatory and Customs frontier in the Irish Sea. Even on a superficial reading it could be seen that this Agreement represented a significant segmentation of the UK’s internal market and allowed important scope for legal intervention by the European Union in the economic life of Northern Ireland. It might have been expected that these features of the Agreement would have been wholly unacceptable to many Conservative MPs. It is now clear that such reservations were overcome by disingenuous assurances from Conservative Ministers that the Withdrawal Agreement could and would be rapidly superseded by a generously wide-ranging new EU/UK trade agreement that would render the WA a dead letter. It was part of the shared mythology between Johnson and the ERG that Theresa May had been a uniquely weak negotiator with the EU and a more robust Johnsonian approach in 2020 would ensure a favourable outcome to the negotiations, sweeping aside the troublesome provisions of the WA. It was on this basis that many Conservative MPs swallowed their objections and loyally supported Johnson’s effusive advocacy of his “oven ready deal.” In giving such assurances to the ERG, Johnson was certainly reckless, as they were naïve and unprincipled in accepting them. But little lies have long legs, and Johnson is now being confronted with the consequences of his nonchalant undertakings at the turn of the year.

Does Johnson want a “deal?

Much ink has been expended in recent days as to whether the Prime Minister and his government are resigned to, or actively want, or are trying to avoid a “no deal” Brexit. There are certainly differing views within the government. The palpable incompetence of the Prime Minister himself moreover makes it difficult for his government to steer any clear line, as exemplified by the contrasting initial reactions from government sources to the story in the Financial Times revealing that the government intended to break international law in its UK Internal Market Bill. But even as far as Johnson himself is concerned, it is probably difficult to attribute to him any clear-cut position. He must be aware of the enhanced economic dislocation a “no deal” Brexit would cause and an agreement with the EU which he could present to the courtier press as a diplomatic triumph would be welcome indeed. On the other hand, any realistically achievable agreement is unlikely this time to pass muster with the ERG and its sympathisers. The EU continues unwilling to grant the UK favoured access to its own large market without sovereignty-constraining guarantees from London and will insist in all circumstances that the WA remains in force.

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Brexit: Little lies have long legs (Original Post) Celerity Sep 2020 OP
This is how to talk to a corrupt leader Richard_GB Sep 2020 #1
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