The National - News

Why Britain’s crisis is set to run for weeks

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Q Is Britain heading for a pre-Brexit general election? A Theresa May last month faced a confidence motion after losing a vote on her Brexit deal with Brussels by a margin of 230. There were 120 members of her own Conservati­ve Party and the Democratic Unionist Party, which holds the balance of power, who voted against her. But these rebels are now going to fall into line to support the government, fearing the alternativ­e of a Labour leadership gaining control of Downing St.

Can the British Prime Minister salvage her Brexit deal after such a massive loss?

It’s not going to be easy. The EU is showing very little sign of compromise. Domestic opponents of Mrs May come from both sides of the spectrum. Those on the right want a clean break from Europe. Those on the left want a closer partnershi­p post-membership. But this would mean compromise­s that Mrs May has ruled out.

What is the main sticking point and can it be addressed?

Some opponents of the withdrawal agreement demand the removal of the so-called Irish border backstop. But that has been put in place to ensure that goods and services can flow freely between the two parts of the island. Without it there is a fear that old hatreds in Ireland will be stirred up and there will be a return to violence. The government in Dublin has played a strong diplomatic hand in securing the backstop and will not want to give it up. A hot mike caught the Irish foreign minister telling a colleague that the government does not want to be seen as the one that reimposed the hard border in Ireland.

Is that the only impediment or does solution lie elsewhere? Related to the Irish border provisions is the sticking point of a Customs Union between the EU and Britain. This would damage Britain’s ability to strike free trade deals with other non-European economies. Mrs May said yesterday that she would not forfeit the commercial opportunit­ies around the rest of the world by tying the UK to Europe in an arrangemen­t that replicated many of the establishe­d links.

Does it all come down to trade ties?

No. Immigratio­n is just as important. Other influentia­l politician­s are urging Mrs May to position Britain alongside Norway – an independen­t, non-EU nation that has full access to the single market. The drawback here is that unlimited flows of immigratio­n between Britain and the EU states would continue after departure. This breaks the pledge that the UK would regain control of its borders by establishi­ng a new skills-based immigratio­n policy.

If all of the above is unacceptab­le, what happens next?

The default position is that Britain leaves the EU on March 29. However, a fast-growing campaign backed by former prime minister Tony Blair and others is calling for a second referendum. The government opposes this saying it would revive the divisions of the 2016 and could lead to continuing rancour.

Domestic opponents of Mrs May come from both sides of the political spectrum

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