The Scotsman

Time for La Theresa to finally fall

Theresa May needs to realise that her Brexit vote defeat was her final scene as Prime Minister, writes Bill Jamieson

-

Much as I love Verdi’s great opera La Traviata, there comes a point in the prolonged death scene when I do wish she’d get on with it. In certain production­s, it seems interminab­le. We know the ending. Just finish. Please.

A similar feeling left me slumped while watching Prime Minister Theresa May’s performanc­e on Tuesday evening. She had just gone down to a massive 149-vote defeat – her second humiliatio­n.

Only on this performanc­e, the diva’s voice had gone, her speech was reduced to a gravelly croak and her words a pitiful surrender to events. Meanwhile in the orchestra pit, it was a tuneless riot, as if each player had an individual notion of the score. No opera, this, more a cacophonou­s rage.

As for the audience, our ears can’t stand it, but the exit doors are blocked. Please, Theresa. Just go. Bow out. Resign. Leave. It can’t go on like this.

It will, of course – but not for long. We can respect her fortitude, admire her endurance, applaud her determinat­ion to seek a withdrawal agreement bridging the conflicted wishes of voters, and salute her persistenc­e with constant trips to Brussels – often in the face of insult and disparagem­ent.

But the very marks of character with which she took us to this impasse cannot take us out.

She lacks the ability to lead, let alone inspire. She is poor at communicat­ion and her assertions, falling far short of persuasion, are often mangled in hesitation. Conviction eludes her.

She is secretive by nature, retreats into vacuous repetition, and glaringly lacks the ability to engage and win over. A perverse malady seems to take hold.

And as long as she is Prime Minister, there is little prospect of the UK emerging from the rut of despair and frustratio­n into which she has led it.

There is also a limit to how long a broken and defeated Prime Minister can endure. When our internatio­nal standing has been blown, the collective responsibi­lity of the Cabinet broken down, her command of the

Commons shattered, and with it authority over events, the stage darkens and the curtain starts to fall.

For the moment, she is kept on stage only by the seeming lack of acceptable contenders. Where is the credible alternativ­e?

There are profound divisions within both the Conservati­ves and Labour. Government has descended into a raucous, factious feuding. The party membership is riven, a crumbling edifice held together only by the lateral tension of the brickwork – the spectre of a Jeremy Corbyn premiershi­p.

As for Labour, deputy leader Tom Watson is reported to have marshalled as many as a third of MPS into his Future Britain Group while the far-left Momentum

continues to hold sway in dozens of constituen­cies.

Yet we are at the point when the search for consensus around an alternativ­e leader is secondary to the catharsis of a Prime Minister’s announceme­nt of departure. It is this that sets off the tumultuous process of successor discovery, the trigger that turns speculativ­e muttering into the serious business of selection – the imperative starting gun of change. The mood of the moment takes over.

There may be no immediate prospect of deliveranc­e from the Brexit quagmire. But while it persists the pressure for a fresh start grows stronger by the day. Business in particular has been crippled by prolonged and corrosive uncertaint­y that

has borne down on new investment and expansion.

But there are other areas, too, which have suffered from neglect and inattentio­n – schools and education in particular, local government services and a searching review of vainglorio­us projects such as HS2. A massive agenda for change is building after three years of all-consuming Brexit fog.

And for this, a clean sweep will be demanded. And that will dictate new leadership and a general election.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom