RE: Europe higher premarket on Brexit deal hopes17 Dec 2020 10:17
The faction that wanted to leave with a ‘hard’ Brexit but with a deal and sensible transition arrangements are perhaps the most likely to get their way, depending on events in the next few weeks. In practice, within a few years, minor variants between a Boris Johnson deal from now and a Theresa May one from 2018 would largely die out – though they could have very different short-term impacts.
The issue here is most MPs or commentators within this group tend to act as if the EU’s red lines and demands were totally unforeseeable, whereas they have in practice remained almost entirely consistent not just throughout the Brexit process, but also with what everyone said they would be before the referendum.
When people complain the deal isn’t what they would have offered on fish, sovereignty, standards, or the level playing field… that’s their fault. Who else’s could it be? And yet any compromises in the deal will be presented as unforeseeable, and should no deal be struck, the effort will be to plant the blame firmly on the EU side.
That leaves the group now insistent that they wanted to leave with no deal, or “on WTO terms” the whole time. They never said that at the time of the referendum, because no-one in their right mind ever would – it was well outside the realms of political possibility in summer 2016.
The existence of trade deals is enough to tell you that “WTO terms” are a fiction: if they were better than deals, why would any country ever spend years or even decades negotiating one?
Instead, this has become a toys-out-of-the-cot fallback option for a group which has either radicalised itself through years in the filter bubble, or the last resort of scoundrels: it allows them to reject any deal as too meek and mild, creating their own blameless political futures.
In the event the UK ends up with a no-deal in December, most of this group will just claim it’s the wrong sort of no-deal: the government either didn’t prepare enough for it, or folded to the EU too soon.
None of these efforts should be allowed to work. All of these people share the blame. But none deserve culpability nearly so much as the prime minister himself. Boris Johnson secured the premiership through his Brexit stance, including by making his predecessor’s position impossible.
With help from his team, he then secured this into an 80-seat majority after purging himself of anyone who wouldn’t back his deal – except himself, when he briefly tried to pull the UK out of part of a deal he negotiated himself. On Brexit, since December 2019, Boris Johnson has had the freest hand imaginable to play. Every move was his to make.
But, as ever, after months of promising us all nothing but royal flushes, he’s pulled his only trick. Once again, he seems set to do nothing more than just play the joker!