The Standard (St. Catharines)

Pro-Brexiteers push for no-deal EU divorce

- WILLIAM BOOTH AND KARLA ADAM

BOSTON, ENGLAND — Here in the fens of Lincolnshi­re, the shock troops in the 2016 campaign for Britain to leave the European Union won their greatest victory.

The hardcore pamphletee­rs and zealous door-knockers, who urged their wards to “take back control” of their borders, their money and their futures, triumphed by the largest margin of any district in Britain, with 75.6 per cent voting to withdraw from the continenta­l trading bloc.

And now? They’re seriously miffed. “I say, let’s get on with it, please!” said Yvonne Stevens, a retired proprietor of a tea shop and member of the local council. “Let’s get out. Knock us on our backsides. Go on! We’ll be on the floor looking up. We’ll sort it out. Just get us out of Europe.”

Stevens and her fellow Brexiteers are pushing for the once-unimaginab­le — to leave the European Union with no deal at all.

Parliament is scheduled for a historic vote Tuesday evening on Prime Minister Theresa May’s unloved, half-in, half-out compromise exit plan. Members of her own Conservati­ve government acknowledg­e that May’s deal — negotiated over the past two years in Brussels — might fail to win support. Many in the political press are predicting a devastatin­g, career-defining defeat.

If May’s deal survives, then Brexit lurches ahead and Britain leaves the European Union — kind of, sort of — on March 29 as planned.

If May’s deal dies? Chaos.

The newspapers and airwaves on Sunday were filled with reports of coups and plots, with some members of Parliament allegedly scheming to wrest control of Brexit away from a battered May and her revolving-door cabinet.

Meanwhile, opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn is threatenin­g (again) to call for a no-confidence vote in the House of Commons “soon.” Corbyn probably has enough support to stage the vote — but not enough votes to actually topple May.

And then? More delay.

Some, including former Tory Prime Minister John Major, argue that the “only sensible course” to prevent the doomsday “no-deal” scenario is for Britain to delay Brexit by revoking Article 50, the EU provision that sets the timetable for departure in March.

The idea is that with some breathing room — and a definitive rejection of her deal in the Parliament — a properly chastened but newly reinvigora­ted May could go back to Brussels and demand more favourable terms.

The problem? European leaders have repeatedly said there is no better deal.

Others, led by those who oppose Brexit, say there should be a second referendum, a do-over, to decide again whether to really, really leave or remain. The electoral commission has advised that staging this second “People’s Vote” would take at minimum 21 weeks.

There is, of course, another option — one that was viewed as reckless, almost unthinkabl­e just a few months ago, but has been gathering growing support among hard-line Brexiteers, and that is for Britain to leave the European Union with no deal.

Without May’s two, maybe three years of negotiated transition, Britain would immediatel­y be treated by the EU as a “third country,” subject to potentiall­y onerous immigratio­n controls, trade tariffs and border inspection­s.

Out: today’s frictionle­ss trade, where an order placed in the morning crosses the English Channel in the afternoon.

In: gridlock at the ports. Also possible: airplanes grounded, holidays cancelled, store shelves emptied. And worse, according to a string of think-tank analyses, economic forecasts and government reports.

“Make no mistake, no-deal cannot be ‘managed.’ And it’s certainly not desirable,” Carolyn Fairbairn, director-general of the Confederat­ion of British Industry, the U.K.’s largest business lobby group, warned in a speech Friday.

In the placid farming and market town of Boston, which holds the prize as the most Brexit-loving city in Britain, the campaigner­s to leave say they are ready to roll the dice with no deal.

“I think all the doom and gloom is exaggerate­d,” said Stevens, the pensioner. “It’s scaremonge­ring is what it is.”

Anton Dani, another local Brexit campaigner, café owner and councillor, agreed. “I think it’s time to say no deal. Let’s close the borders. Let’s keep our money.”

Michael Cooper, another town councillor who campaigned hard for Brexit, says he is no fan of May’s agreement but prefers it to crashing out of Europe.

“If Theresa May’s deal gets binned, we’re left with nothing,” he said.

What he cannot abide is the idea of a second referendum. (”We would win again,” he vowed.) Or Brexit being snatched away.

As he strolled down the commercial streets of Boston, he pointed out all the restaurant­s and shops — Taste of Lithuania and Baltic Foods — catering to the tens of thousands of Eastern European immigrants who poured into Boston over the past 15 years to work in the fields and food processing and packing plants — to do the low-wage, manual labour that native-born Brits won’t do in the vegetable garden of England.

“The reasons for Brexit haven’t changed,” said Cooper, who said he was not against the newcomers but that “too many came too quickly.”

A recent poll found that “no deal” was popular among Conservati­ve Party voters, many of whom think that the government’s warnings are intended to stoke unfounded fear.

The survey, by Queen Mary University of London and Sussex University, asked what would be voters’ first preference in a three-way referendum where the options were leaving without a deal, leaving with May’s deal, or remaining in the European Union. Conservati­ve Party voters preferred leaving without a deal (43 per cent) to May’s deal (27 per cent) or remain (23 per cent). Among dues-paying Tory activists, support for no deal soared to 57 per cent.

A survey of British MPs conducted for the group UK in a Changing Europe found that Leavers in the House of Commons were “highly skeptical” about the likelihood of disruption in the event of no deal, with two exceptions. They assumed the pound sterling would probably drop in value and there would be delays at the ports.

Rosalind Watson was protesting outside of Westminste­r on Friday along with a group of Brexiteers, whose numbers have been growing over the past month.

Watson came to London from Birmingham, where she works as a caregiver.She wasn’t a fan of May’s deal, which she said would make Britain an EU “rule-taker.” She’d prefer to leave without a deal.

“I think we should give it a try, we can always go back in,” Watson said. When asked about the prediction­s of economic ruin, she wasn’t convinced.

“We don’t know until we try,” she said.

 ?? WILLIAM BOOTH THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Michael Cooper, pro-Brexit campaigner in the English town of Boston, remains steadfast.
WILLIAM BOOTH THE WASHINGTON POST Michael Cooper, pro-Brexit campaigner in the English town of Boston, remains steadfast.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada