The Argus

We’re still unsure what kind of Brexit is coming down the line after two years

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BREXIT rumbles along but are we finally getting to the crunch point?

At times since the Brexit campaign commenced and the outcome of the referendum was determined it has been like ground-hog day with no end apparently in sight and no sign of any progress being made.

Last week however the political drama was fever pitch and it was unmissable from the leaks that both the UK Government and the EU had reached a deal that they would recommend to their respective sides.

The cabinet meeting in Downing Street went on and on. It seemed that the world had stopped as it awaited the outcome of that cabinet meeting. Certainly all eyes in the UK, Ireland and much of Europe was on that famous door and the microphone outside Number 10, awaiting the outcome of the cabinet deliberati­ons. Would the Brexiteers win out or would they support the deal.

Prime Minister’s Theresa May has since won admiration for her stubbornne­ss, and steadiness at the helm. She has a deal, she is sticking to it, is going nowhere and stood in the House of Commons for three hours answering questions from all comers.

She then took all the questions the media could throw at her at a press conference on Thursday evening and then on Friday morning she faced the public, taking questions on a LBC radio show.

In less than 24 hours she had faced her opponents on both sides of the Houses of Commons, the media and the public. They fired all the brickbats they could her way and she remained standing and resolute.

Meanwhile there were resignatio­ns from her cabinet, with chief agitator JacobRees Mogg holding court with the media after he signed his letter seeking a motion of no confidence in his Prime Minister. Still on Monday morning there was no sign of the Brexiteers reaching a required 48 letters to seek to remove Theresa May.

In the intervenin­g days the momentum seems to have swung somewhat in favour of the proposed deal, however imperfect it may be, with business interests in the UK giving a qualified endorsemen­t of the deal, while there was a big shift in public opin- ion in Northern Ireland when the Ulster Farmers Union backed the deal, leaving the DUP more and more isolated as the lone voice in the wilderness crying foul.

Getting the deal approved in Parliament in December still seems an unlikely task, but now that the deal there for all to read in black and white, there seems to be a willingnes­s just to get on with it and move on.

That is the practical approach amongst the ordinary members of the public and the business community. Having a practical approach is not something you can rely upon amongst the Brexiteers who seem miffed that the deal means having to compromise, while Labour remain a cuckoo-land, unwilling to end the impasse by backing the deal.

For us in Ireland the deal seems a sensible and practical outcome,but we remain stuck in neutral until the UK act decisively.

Until then all we can do is sit back and watch the British tear themselves apart over a process they themselves started.

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