Yorkshire Post

MPs should think again about voting for bad deal

- Tony Rossiter Tony Rossiter, from North Yorkshire, is a former diplomat and civil servant who worked predominan­tly at the Department of Trade and Industry.

ONCE MORE UNTO BREACH: HERE WE go again. Theresa May’s ‘meaningful vote’ can be put off no longer. In January her deal with the EU was rejected by 230 votes – the biggest government defeat in the history of Parliament.

With just 18 days to go before her selfimpose­d deadline of March 29, the Prime Minister has called on MPs to do their duty. They should remember Edmund Burke’s dictum: “Your representa­tive owes you … his judgment; and he betrays instead of serving you if he sacrifices it to your opinion.”

The Withdrawal Agreement, on which MPs will vote, runs to 599 pages. I do hope that every MP has read every single page. We elect MPs to examine the facts, consider complex issues and make decisions that are in the interests of the country. That is what we pay them to do.

‘Take back control’ was a powerful slogan of the Leave campaign. So it’s pretty amazing that the Withdrawal Agreement provides for a transition period lasting until the end of 2020 (2022 at most) during which the UK will have no say in making or amending EU regulation­s but will have to follow them to the letter; and will remain subject to European Court of Justice jurisdicti­on. Far from taking back control, after March 29 we will relinquish the control and influence we currently have.

The Agreement sets out the basis for calculatin­g the ‘divorce bill’ which the UK will have to pay to meet its financial obligation­s – expected to be at least £39bn. Alongside the Withdrawal Agreement is a political declaratio­n. It is full of warm words about the future EU/ UK relationsh­ip, but lacks specific detail and has no legal force.

We would hand over large amounts of money without any guarantees about the nature of our future trade relationsh­ip with the EU. Mrs May’s deal is a very bad deal.

A lot of people are fed up with the Brexit saga, and just want to get the whole thing over and done with. That’s understand­able. To keep her party together, Mrs May has allowed the Brexit debate to drag on for more than two and a half years.

It has paralysed the domestic agenda and taken resources away from other areas where urgent government action is needed. But anyone who believes that supporting Mrs May’s deal will get Brexit over is in for a nasty shock.

All the difficult issues have been kicked into the long grass and will be addressed only as part of future trade negotiatio­ns – and those could take a very long time indeed. As Sir Ivan Rogers, former British Ambassador to the EU, wrote recently: “The trade negotiatio­ns ahead will be vastly more complex and more difficult than the ones we have been through.”

So what should MPs do? If they genuinely believe that their constituen­ts and the country will be better off with the UK outside the EU, then they should vote for Mrs May’s deal, bad as it is.

If, on the other hand, they just believe that ‘the will of the British people,’ as expressed on June 23, 2016, requires them to support Mrs May’s deal, closing off all other options, they should think again. They should pay attention to the words of Sir John Major: “The Government itself has admitted that – under any and every form of Brexit – every part of the UK will be worse off. Our country will also be weaker and less influentia­l; and those in our society who have the least will suffer the deepest deprivatio­n of all.” There is something lemming-like about MPs deliberate­ly voting to weaken their own country.

MPs in Leave-voting constituen­cies should, unlike the government, be honest. They should explain the downside of Brexit to their constituen­ts. Many of those constituen­cies have suffered industrial decline and swingeing austerity cuts that have nothing to do with the EU. These contribute­d to a Leave vote that was a protest against the status quo. The government, transfixed by Brexit, has done nothing to address those underlying concerns.

We should also bear in mind the referendum’s flaws. First, it was advisory. The Government was required to take it into account – not to plunge willy-nilly in a headlong dash towards an extreme interpreta­tion of Brexit. Second, it was approved by just 37 per cent of the electorate (no minimum threshold of 40 per cent, as applied in the referendum­s on Scottish and Welsh devolution). Third, the Leave campaign made claims (e.g. on Turkish immigratio­n and that £350m for the NHS) that were false and elements of the campaign broke electoral law.

Referendum­s are not as sacrosanct as supporters of Brexit would have us believe. In 1997 a referendum narrowly approved the creation of the Welsh Assembly. Far from accepting that result, Mrs May and her Conservati­ve colleagues continued to oppose it. We now have more informatio­n about the effects and consequenc­es of Brexit than we had in 2016. It cannot be undemocrat­ic to check that ‘the will of the British people’ remains the same. As David Davis, a former Brexit Secretary, has said: “If a democracy cannot change its mind, it ceases to be a democracy.”

 ?? PICTURE: PA WIRE. ?? A meaningful Parliament­ary vote on Brexit can be put off no longer as the clock ticks down to departure later this month.
PICTURE: PA WIRE. A meaningful Parliament­ary vote on Brexit can be put off no longer as the clock ticks down to departure later this month.
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