Busy Week In Brexit

As I write this Britain’s exit from the European Union is a mere 20 days away. The plan with the most current support (among Members of Parliament) seems to be Remaining in the Customs Union which papers over all those pesky Irish problems but is highly unsatisfactory to Hard Brexiteers who argue that without the ability to negotiate separate trade deals (clorinated chickens for instance) there will be no economic benefit.

Of course it was mostly about racism and not economics anyway.

The Guardian lays out things like this-

The Brexit state of play: a guide to next week’s crucial votes
by Heather Stewart, The Guardian
Fri 8 Mar 2019

Theresa May will bring her Brexit deal back to parliament for MPs to be given the chance to accept or reject it in the so-called meaningful vote two.

After the government’s historic defeat by 230 votes on 16 January, the prime minister promised to hold cross-party meetings “to identify what would be required to secure the backing of the house”.

She has since announced £1.6bn for a towns fund in the hope of winning over Labour MPs from leave-voting areas, and new promises on workers’ rights, including the opportunity to vote on new EU directives on the labour market.

Most of the government’s focus, however, has been on trying to persuade the EU27 to provide “legally binding guarantees” on the Irish backstop.

May’s attorney general, Geoffrey Cox, has been battling to secure changes, perhaps a beefed-up arbitration mechanism to determine whether the backstop remains necessary, or a bit of legal text underlining its temporary nature. By all accounts the talks are not going well, so it is unclear how much new the prime minister will have to offer.

The European Research Group (ERG) has set up a legal “star chamber”, made up of a clutch of Brexit-backing lawyers and chaired by the veteran Tory Eurosceptic MP Bill Cash, to examine what, if anything, Cox brings back from Brussels. The mood could still change.

On Friday, however, the ERG was keenly sharing an article by the former farming minister George Eustice, calling on the government to “have the courage to take our freedom first and talk afterwards”.

The DUP, which is seen as key to winning over many in the ERG, appears implacable. Its Brexit spokesman, Sammy Wilson, said this week that only changes to the withdrawal agreement would do.

What happens if May loses the vote?

It depends how badly. Defeat by a narrow margin, of fewer than say 50 votes, could allow her to have another go in a third meaningful vote.

Before she could do that, she has promised MPs two further votes next week, on whether they want no deal and whether to delay Brexit. She will face a dilemma over how, and whether, to whip Tory MPs on the no-deal Brexit vote.

Keeping that option on the table has been an integral part of the government’s negotiating strategy, but May would face a slew of resignations if she tried to whip MPs to vote for no deal with little more than a fortnight to go until exit day.

“What she whips is so emblematic of the whole situation,” says Anand Menon of the thinktank UK in a Changing Europe. “If she doesn’t whip because she’s terrified of both wings of her own party, that’s a government that’s lost control.

Received wisdom in Westminster is that a loss by more than about 50 votes,would be catastrophe, because it suggests May’s deal is irretrievably unpopular.

Campaigners for a second referendum hailed Jeremy Corbyn’s support for a “public vote” as a significant milestone, and the shadow cabinet agreed on Tuesday that it would be prepared to whip for a pro-referendum amendment if the right one were tabled.

Labour also remains committed to trying to achieve a softer Brexit. Corbyn’s meeting with the former Tory ministers Nick Boles and Oliver Letwin on Wednesday suggested it was still possible that some compromise might emerge that the frontbench could decide to back.

That could even be tabled as an amendment to next week’s vote on extending article 50, though May could decide to short-circuit that vote by announcing that she has no choice but to request an extension herself.

Might we still get a public vote of some sort?

It is possible, particularly if there is a long-ish extension to article 50, giving advocates of a referendum time to rally support in parliament.

As it stands, it appears unlikely there would be a majority for the idea, with around 10 Conservative MPs willing to support it, and up to 30 Labour MPs willing to defy the whip to vote against.

It is also very unclear which options would be put to the people. AIt has decided not to back an amendment tabled by the Labour backbenchers Peter Kyle and Phil Wilson calling for a “confirmatory” referendum.

Some shadow ministers and Labour spokespeople have made clear, however, that the party would hope to see a “credible alternative” on the ballot paper to give Labour leave voters an opportunity to choose Brexit.

EU leaders would need to confirm any extension, and the natural moment to do so would be at the next European council meeting on 20 and 21 March. They would be keen to receive an application before that.

With just days to go before Brexit day on 29 March, if no extension is signed off at that summit, because MPs have not yet agreed a deal, for example, there would be a very high risk of a no-deal Brexit.

How long an extension will the UK request?

That remains very unclear. Even if the deal is agreed by MPs next week, many ministers are convinced a short “technical” extension of a few weeks would be necessary in order to get the necessary legislation through to exit smoothly.

If the deal is not agreed, Brexiters will be pushing for as short an extension as possible, ending before the new European parliament starts sitting in July, and May herself has repeatedly stressed the risks of a longer delay. Remainers would prefer a longer period to allow time for alternative options, including a referendum, to come into play.

It is highly likely that if May’s deal is voted down again, MPs will agree a delay to Brexit next week. The EU27 are likely to follow suit, provided they are able to see some way ahead by which a majority in parliament could be found.

It is even possible that Cox returns triumphant, the Brexiters knuckle under and the deal passes.

Any extension of article 50, particularly a short one, would only set up another cliff-edge a few weeks or months ahead. Some ministers believe that could finally be the thing that brings Brexiters into line behind May’s deal. If not, a so-called “no-deal by accident” remains a serious risk.

Clearly May has delayed this vote to exert maximum pressure on Parliament to approve it. Well, fine, but it’s the same deal that was rejected by a margin of 230 and since her Government has only the narrowest of coalition majorities any substantial defection is likely fatal.

I personally can not see any way this leads to a continuation of her time as Prime Minister, but presumably she has a plan, as irrational as it might be.