Ensayo sobre el tiempo perdido

El virus del estornudo tocó una mañana la puerta y cambió todo: las casas se transformaron en salas de espera colmadas de pacientes -e impacientes- que no saben a ciencia cierta qué esperar. La…

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Predictions Already Being Met

So, I also predicted that, in deciding to call a General Election, May would pivot towards the ERG, and throw the Tory Remainers under the bus. This week, that last prediction has been fulfilled. Having massively lost the vote on her Withdrawal Bill, May responded, by wasting further time, to run down the clock, and then pivoted sharp right towards the ERG. She went so far, yesterday, that she supported the Brady Amendment, which flatly contradicts her narrative that the agreed deal, with the EU, was the best and only deal available, and vacuously talks about going back to the EU to demand, effectively, that the backstop be dropped, as demanded by the ERG. She did that, despite having spoken to Junker at lunchtime, when he told her, before she spoke in the Commons, that there was absolutely no chance of the EU agreeing even to discuss reopening discussion on the backstop.

May has clearly set out the ground she is going to stand on, in the upcoming battle. It is firmly with the ERG, and on the ground of a managed no deal Brexit. But, it’s also clear that there is no majority in parliament, currently, for such a No Deal Brexit. In voting for the Dromey-Spellman amendment, which ruled out No Deal, parliament has again shown that the only way forward is, now, a General Election or another referendum. In two weeks time, after the EU have again told May that the Withdrawal Agreement is not going to be reopened, she will come back to parliament, and will either have to a) capitulate once again, reneging on her alliance with the ERG, which will destroy her, because the Tory rank and file will not stomach the consequences, or else she will again have to propose a managed no deal, in line with her “No deal is better than a bad deal mantra”. But, as yesterday showed, there is no majority in parliament for such a No Deal solution. As May runs down the clock, and the effects of Brexit become clearer — last night when the amendments were being serially defeated, the Pound took a massive nosedive, only recovering after the Dromey-Spellman amendment was passed.

Polls show that 80% of Tory members and voters back No Deal. It is then, rather, a no brainer for May. What yesterday, in parliament, showed was that the Tories are able to coalesce around some form of Brexit policy. The Tory RINOS, who caved, in the confidence vote against May, have shown that, absent any credible opposition to Brexit from Corbyn’s Labour Party, they will suck it up. Those that can’t will get removed by their local associations. The last two days also showed that Corbyn’s continued support for Brexit, whilst 90% of the party seeks to stop it, causes Labour, by contrast, to be continually fractured and unstable. The fact that Labour, initially, was not going to oppose the racist new Immigration Bill, introduced by the Tories, and only half-heartedly agreed to do so, with a half-hearted one line whip, after an incompetent and embarrassing U-turn, illustrates Labour’s problem, of the leadership being massively out of step with the membership, not just on Brexit, but also on free movement, and opposition to immigration laws.

Corbyn’s leadership is facing all sorts of different roads at the same time, in a form of triangulation way in excess of what even Blair attempted. The result is that the party’s policies appear confused and confusing, unthought out, contradictory, and not entirely honest in their advocacy. That is why, as I said at the start of the year, May would be mad not to call a General Election, given the state of disarray within the ranks of Labour, on this issue, which is the decisive issue of the day, and which has drowned out discussion of all the other aspects of politics, upon which Labour would otherwise have a clear lead.

As the clock is almost run-out, but with May still unable to get her deal, or a No Deal through parliament, and with her wanting to avoid another referendum, with Corbyn still, currently, supporting her in that ambition, her obvious, indeed only choice left, will be to call a General Election. She will, have to ask for an extension of Article 50, because whatever happens now, Brexit cannot be carried through into law by March 29th anyway. She will ask for an extension in order to hold a General Election. The EU may grant it, in order to avoid a crash out on March 29th, but on the basis of understanding that, if May wins the election, she will only come back to negotiate a managed “No Deal”, they may not, preferring to allow Britain to collapse in chaos. On the other hand, they may now be so fed up of Britain’s continual lying about its positions and intentions that getting shut of a Britain that has always been a disruptive influence, would be in their longer term interests. It would inevitably mean that the EU would treat the UK as a hostile competitor, and begin to weaken its influence, by all available means.

Currently, Corbyn insists that Labour would go into an election still arguing for Brexit. His positions on the Customs Union and Single Market are exploded every time they come into contact with reality, as May showed, yesterday, in parliament. He clearly does not understand the technical details of a Customs Union or Single Market, and his position, of negotiating a Customs Union, makes no sense. It bears no resemblance to reality, which means, as yesterday, the Tories will be able to make him look stupid, or dissembling, every time it is discussed. The reality of Corbyn’s position, on the Customs Union and Single Market, is that it is as unachievable, indeed more so than the Tories idea that they can have a “Customs Arrangement” that enables them to have all the benefits of free trade, as currently enjoyed in the EU, but with none of the responsibilities. So, the Tories, as well as the Liberals, Greens, Plaid, SNP trying to take votes from Labour, will simply be able to point to that inconsistency, to show that a Labour government would be placed in exactly the same position as the Tories, of being unable to achieve their aims, and so faced with the choice of either capitulating on those aims, or else, themselves, being forced into a No Deal Brexit. Given Corbyn’s behaviour over the last three years, and his long standing opposition to the EU, it would have to be suspected that this last outcome is what he would be happy with, anyway.

In 2017, Labour was loaned the votes of tens of thousands of Liberals, Greens, and even some Remainer Tories, where it looked possible that Labour might have a chance of preventing a hard Tory Brexit government coming to power. Labour’s behaviour, in the last three years, and Corbyn’s insistence on arguing for Brexit, means those votes, and more besides, are likely to disappear in any snap Brexit election. After all, why vote Labour if its going to pursue an almost identical Brexit agenda as the Tories, which must also end in some form of No Deal Brexit?

Yesterday, as I had predicted, May threw the Tory Remainers under the ERG bus, as she moves towards a General Election based on a managed no deal. She was assisted in that by around 14 right-wing Labourites, who jumped on board the ERG bus, alongside driver Rees-Mogg so as to ensure that they were crushed. It is part of a dangerous reactionary alliance of nationalists that is going along with Britain itself sliding inexorably towards increasing reaction, and disaster.

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