Gulf News

Brexit process reaches a crossroads

As British Prime Minister Theresa May continues to helm the complicate­d process, her party should firmly stand by her

- By William Hague ■ William Hague is a former British foreign secretary.

Theresa May, the British Prime Minister, and the Conservati­ves have had a better few months. While the Windrush debacle has been deeply embarrassi­ng for all concerned, the British Government has neverthele­ss proved to be stronger and more competent than many detractors allowed. In rallying most western countries into a joint and massive expulsion of Russian intelligen­ce officers, ministers pulled off a considerab­le diplomatic success. Their response to the use of chemical weapons in Syria was well-judged and left Labour divided and flounderin­g. Recent months have also seen a competent budget and the maintenanc­e of reasonable economic confidence despite all the uncertaint­ies of Brexit. Many aspects of the EU withdrawal agreement have been nailed down in a constructi­ve spirit. The Tories are even credited with a small poll lead.

Yet, it would be very easy for this hard-earned progress to be lost in short order, and for the government soon to be in the midst of an existentia­l crisis. For in the next two months, the Brexit process reaches a crossroads where the irreconcil­able requiremen­ts of assuaging business sentiment, securing future trading freedom and maintainin­g an open border with Ireland meet and have to be sacrificed, amended or assured. The question of whether the United Kingdom stays in a Customs Union with the European Union (EU) is integral to all those issues, and thus is becoming the fundamenta­l and decisive controvers­y.

By June, a solution to the Irish border issue will either be in sight, or the whole prospect of a Brexit deal will again be in doubt. The prospect of Government defeats in parliament will embolden EU negotiator­s to take a harder line; no solution to the Irish border acceptable to the UK will be agreed; a majority of the Commons might then vote for a Customs Union; many pro-Brexit Tories would say they cannot abide by that; and the conduct of the negotiatio­ns and credible government becomes almost or actually impossible. It’s a grim but plausible scenario.

Avoiding this requires, first of all, discipline at the top of government. Reports of a Number 10 adviser saying they “wouldn’t be crying” if defeated on the Customs Union and suggesting that “only” British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and Secretary of Trade Liam Fox would quit if a change in policy is the sort of thing that can bring catastroph­e. Nothing undermines a leader more than the idea taking hold that you don’t mind having something imposed on you, because from then on, everyone will try to impose their view in a free-for-all.

Choosing the lesser evils

Most of all, however, it requires other Tories consciousl­y to avoid the elephant traps so obviously prepared for them — traps designed to bring down the entire Government or to humiliate Britain in the negotiatio­ns. The first has been prepared by the Labour Party, by saying they will join rebel Tories in voting to insist on a Customs Union.

Everyone now has to choose the lesser of evils. I have previously drawn attention to the attraction­s of a “partial Customs Union”, as set out in a paper from the Institute of Directors. Alternativ­es, such as the plans put forward by UK negotiator­s for charging different customs duties depending on the destinatio­n of goods crossing the border are more complex but also a serious attempt to find an answer. What is crucial, though, is that political chaos on the Tory side would be much worse than any of these ideas.

As a Conservati­ve, I can accept Brexit without a Customs Union, or Brexit with a partial one, but I can’t accept that any Tory should make this issue unmanageab­le for a prime minister who has been doing her level best to guide the country through this very complicate­d process. Any real prospect of the Labour leadership coming to power would be worse for business, investment, confidence, jobs — not to mention the western alliance — than any aspect of leaving the EU. Britain can prosper in or out of the EU. It has no hope of doing so with a Marxist-led government.

So, as the debates of the next few weeks gather pace, sounding so technical over border procedures and customs, remember what is really going on. For Labour, this is the vehicle to bring down the government. For some in Brussels, it may very well be that too.

No Tory should give them the chance. They should see the traps, and, for the country’s sake, watch where they’re walking.

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