Nelson Mail

Johnson makes his daring move

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Shock! Horror! Johnson prorogues parliament! End of democracy in Britain! The speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow, says he was not even consulted, and calls it ‘‘a constituti­onal outrage’’.

Or, to put it a little less dramatical­ly, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has cut the amount of time that parliament will meet before he crashes the United Kingdom out of the European Union in a ‘‘no-deal’’ Brexit on October 31 by six working days.

Johnson will face parliament for the first time as prime minister on September 4, but MPs will all go off on holiday again on September 10, not on the 13th as scheduled. And then parliament won’t meet again until October 14, not on the originally planned date of October 9. So no need to panic, and a rather small constituti­onal outrage.

Great commotion in the media, of course, but the reports that zombies will roam the streets of London eating the children of Remainers after Britain’s no-deal departure from the EU on Halloween are absolutely untrue.

Johnson is an accidental prime minister. Few people even in his own Conservati­ve Party thought he was fit for the job, but they panicked after the Conservati­ves came fifth in May’s European elections.

The British only voted in those elections at all because Theresa May’s government still hadn’t managed to leave the EU after three years of trying. It lost so badly because a lot of Brexit-backing Conservati­ves defected to Nigel Farage’s single-issue Brexit Party in exasperati­on – and to win them back, the Conservati­ves had to change leaders.

So out goes May and in comes Johnson, who may be a liar and a clown, but he is popular with Conservati­ve voters. And this new prime minister, chosen only by a vote of Conservati­ve Party members, inherits the task of keeping the party’s promise to take the UK out of the EU. Alas, the parliament­ary arithmetic to do that still does not work.

The Conservati­ve government has only a one-vote majority in

parliament, but that’s the smaller part of the problem. The bigger part is that Conservati­ve MPs are so split on the question of Brexit that there is no exit deal that all of them will vote for.

May did actually negotiate a realistic exit deal with the EU late last year, which allowed for a smooth continuati­on of trade and avoided the danger of re-creating a ‘‘hard’’ border in Ireland. Unfortunat­ely, that enraged the extremist ‘‘head-bangers’’ on the far right of the Conservati­ve Party so much that they voted May’s deal down three times.

The alternativ­e is simply to leave without a deal. That means accepting a huge hit to British trade, half of which is with the EU, a crash in the value of the pound, and a great many lost British jobs.

Johnson is no head-banger, but he is a chameleon who will change colour if it serves his purposes, and he has adopted the no-deal policy in order to become prime minister.

This still does not end the Conservati­ve Party’s civil war over Brexit, because a small number of moderates on the other wing of the party will rebel and vote against a no-deal Brexit rather than see the country dragged into economic ruin. They may be as few as a dozen, but that might be enough to bring the government down.

So where are the Opposition parties in all this? All over the place. There are four of them, and they can’t agree on the time of day, let alone on a common strategy for stopping no-deal Brexit.

Given time, they might, because it is really their duty to avoid economic disaster in Britain, avert a new war in Ireland, and hold the UK together. Scotland will probably secede if there is a no-deal Brexit. But they are taking their own sweet time about it.

That’s why Johnson thinks it’s worth taking flak for cutting the number of days parliament will meet between now and October 31. The fewer days the Opposition has to work on the problem, the less likely it is to get its ducks in a row. It’s as simple as that, and it’s entirely legal.

So what are the odds that Britain will really commit this massive act of self-harm? About the same as they were last week, actually.

Small crisis, not many hurt.

Gwynne Dyer’s new book is Growing Pains: The Future of Democracy (and Work).

Conservati­ve MPs are so split on the question of Brexit that there is no exit deal that all of them will vote for.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Boris Johnson becoming the Conservati­ve Party’s new leader won’t resolve the party’s civil war over Brexit.
GETTY IMAGES Boris Johnson becoming the Conservati­ve Party’s new leader won’t resolve the party’s civil war over Brexit.
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