Battle over Brexit gets messy
LONDON: The battle over Brexit — Britain’s planned exit from the European Union — has become very messy indeed.
Prime Minister Theresa May’s Government has been plunged into disarray with the resignation of her flamboyant foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, who quit in protest of May’s plans for a socalled soft Brexit, which would maintain close trade ties with Europe.
Such a scenario, Johnson wrote in his resignation letter, could result in Britain being relegated to ‘‘the status of a colony’’ of the European Union.
The rebellion within her own Conservative Party illustrated May’s dire political weakness less than nine months before the split is to take effect in March.
Johnson’s departure came less than 24 hours after that of another key Cabinet member, David Davis, who was tasked with overseeing Brexit.
May says it is crucial to avoid a ‘‘hard’’ Brexit — a departure from the EU without a deal in place. Such a scenario could wreak havoc on Britain’s financial sector and the wider economy.
‘‘This is the Brexit that is in our national interest,’’ she told a raucous session of Parliament shortly after Johnson’s departure was announced by Downing Street.
Johnson, the floppyhaired former mayor of London, helped spearhead the campaign that led to Britain’s narrow vote in June 2016 to break with the EU.
May moved quickly to replace both the departing ministers.
Moving into Johnson’s spot is Jeremy Hunt, formerly the health secretary. Davis was supplanted by Dominic Raab, an exhousing minister who was a leading Brexit proponent.
Under the prime minister’s plan, to which her Cabinet had agreed last week, Britain would keep close trade ties to the EU and remain subject to some of its regulatory mechanisms.
That prospect set off a wave of anger from those who considered Brexit a ringing declaration of independence from the bureaucracy in Brussels.
British press reports speculated that the ambitious Johnson might be readying a challenge to May for the leader ship of the party, potentially setting himself up to become prime minister.
May argued that her plan represented the only way to avoid the reimposing of border formalities such as tariffs and immigration checks between Ireland, which is an EU member, and Northern Ireland, which is part of the United Kingdom. The Irish border has been a big sticking point in Brexit negotiations with the EU.
Backers of Brexit say May’s plan would hobble Britain’s ability to make trade deals of its own, and leave it subject to the very EU regulations it sought to leave behind in the referendum vote more than two years ago.
Under the timetable, Britain is to formally leave the bloc on March 29, 2019. But negotiations have bogged down again and again as the clock runs down. —