Daily Express

Arrogant Remainer plots could lead to Boris’s finest hour

- Leo McKinstry Daily Express columnist

AS the Tories begin their annual conference in Manchester, the fate of their party hangs in the balance. Their survival as a political force depends on the decisions taken by Boris Johnson and his embattled Government over the coming days.

If Brexit is finally delivered, they will be able to bask in the national outpouring of triumphant relief as Britain regains its independen­ce. If Brexit continues to be thwarted by destructiv­e stalemate, they will sink ever deeper in the mire of unpopulari­ty.

For all Boris’s dynamism and determinat­ion, the prospects for immediate success do not appear promising. The Prime Minister is under permanent siege at Westminste­r, where he presides over a badly split party devoid of a Commons majority.

His troubles have been ruthlessly exploited by the opposition, which has forced through legislatio­n that both outlaws a no-deal Brexit and requires him to beg the EU for a further delay if a withdrawal agreement is not reached by mid-October.

Although Boris has rightly called this anti-Brexit measure “the Surrender Act”, it will be difficult for him to evade its requiremen­ts, particular­ly after last week’s Supreme Court ruling over his “unlawful” suspension of Parliament. There has been wild speculatio­n Downing St could override the law by the use of an EU Treaty, or an Order of Council or even the Civil Contingenc­ies Act, but all these ideas smack of delusion.

WITH anti-Government forces still blocking a general election, the only realistic escape route seems to lie in securing a workable exit deal. Even that option looks doubtful. Not only have negotiatio­ns stalled with the EU, but even moderate Labour MPs are in no mood to help the Government following the confrontat­ional Commons scenes last week.Yet the explosive hostility towards Boris could backfire on the Remain cause. In the current embittered crisis may be the seeds of Tory salvation.

Drunk on the power of usurping the executive, the antiBrexit­eers risk grossly overreachi­ng themselves. Far from underminin­g the PM with their ever greater aggression, they could play right into his hands.

Their arrogance was on full display over the weekend, as some of them talked grandly of trying to impeach Boris for breaking the law. Such a move would be both absurdly archaic and profoundly undemocrat­ic, having not been used since 1848 when Lord Palmerston was accused of making a secret treaty with Russia. Its use today would only fuel a wave of public anger at the Remainers.

Equally wrong are the opposition plans to tighten the legal straitjack­et on Boris. This could be done by the passage of a further law which would hand the Speaker John Bercow new powers to write to the EU requesting a delay in Brexit, as well as to appoint a new British EU Commission­er.

Downing Street hinted in fury at the weekend that foreign government­s – including that of France – may have been involved in the drafting of some of the Remainer legislatio­n, a charge dismissed as “ridiculous” by former attorney general Dominic Grieve.

It is true, however, that parts of the opposition are plotting to oust Boris swiftly through a vote of no-confidence in the House, perhaps as early as this week. The Scottish Nationalis­ts describe such a motion as “the only game in town” and argue that, once Boris goes, the Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn should form a temporary caretaker administra­tion.

Yet this would be the ideal short-term outcome for Boris. It would feed on the narrative of Remainer politician­s scheming to overturn the referendum result, while he could present himself as democracy’s true champion.

Furthermor­e, there would be widespread indignatio­n at any unscrupulo­us manoeuvre to create a Corbyn premiershi­p without a vote.

THE far-Left extremist is the most despised Opposition leader in history. A poll yesterday showed, by an overwhelmi­ng margin, the British people prefer a nodeal Brexit to Corbyn as PM.

Above all, a successful vote of no-confidence by the opposition could give Boris exactly what he craves: a general election.As a magnetic campaigner, he would relish the chance to end the current “zombie” Parliament, crush Corbyn’s Labour and win a majority for his robust Brexit policy.

At Manchester this week, he has the chance to set out an inspiring message for the next election, based on the theme that the Tories will “get Brexit done”. Despite all his current difficulti­es, Boris’s finest hour could soon be on the horizon.

‘The British people would prefer no-deal to having Corbyn as PM’

 ?? Picture: JEFF J MITCHELL/GETTY ?? UNDER SIEGE: Premier Boris Johnson arriving for the Tory conference in Manchester yesterday
Picture: JEFF J MITCHELL/GETTY UNDER SIEGE: Premier Boris Johnson arriving for the Tory conference in Manchester yesterday
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