ANALYSIS: Oh **UK! What next for Brexit?



A country in chaos


by Emily Straton and Biodun Iginla, The Economist Intelligence Unit News Analysts, London


Britain’s political crisis has reached new depths. Parliament must seize the initiative


 Print edition | Leaders

Mar 14th 2019






W

hen historians come to write the tale of Britain’s attempts to leave the European Union, this week may be seen as the moment the country finally grasped the mess it was in. In the campaign, Leavers had promised voters that Brexit would be easy because Britain “holds all the cards”. This week Parliament was so scornful of the exit deal that Theresa May had spent two years negotiating and renegotiating in Brussels that mps threw it out for a second time, by 149 votes—the fourth-biggest government defeat in modern parliamentary history. The next day mps rejected what had once been her back-up plan of simply walking out without a deal. The prime minister has lost control. On Wednesday four cabinet ministers failed to back her in a crucial vote. Both main parties, long divided over Brexit, are seeing their factions splintering into ever-angrier sub-factions. And all this just two weeks before exit day.


Even by the chaotic standards of the three years since the referendum, the country is lost (see article). Mrs May boasted this week of “send[ing] a message to the whole world about the sort of country the United Kingdom will be”. She is not wrong: it is a laughing-stock. An unflappable place supposedly built on compromise and a stiff upper lip is consumed by accusations of treachery and betrayal. Yet the demolition of her plan offers Britain a chance to rethink its misguided approach to leaving the eu. Mrs May has made the worst of a bad job. This week’s chaos gives the country a shot at coming up with something better.

Posted by Biodun Iginla at 10:35 AM  Email This

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Labels: BrexitBritain’s political crisisEmily Straton and Biodun Iginlaeuropean union,referendumThe Economist Intelligence Unit News Analyststheresa may


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