Gulf News

EU will go the whole hog on Brexit deal

If Brexiteers believe for one minute that Brussels will compromise on its fundamenta­l tenets, they are sadly mistaken

- By Mick O’Reilly Foreign Correspond­ent

If you’re old enough to remember black and white movies, you’re likely old enough to remember Larry, Curly and Moe. The Three Stooges. If you’re not, then Google them and watch some YouTube clips. You’ll soon get the picture that they’re about as useful as a fork when it’s raining soup. A spoon is what you need.

Around the same time as the Three Stooges were enjoying the waning rays of their heyday, the then United States president, John F. Kennedy, was visiting his family’s old homestead in County Wexford, in the south east of Ireland, just where it turns a corner if you were to look at a map on the bottom right side. And to mark that occasion, every year since then over the past six decades, there’s a gathering of intelligen­tsia, putting forward the best democratic theories, analysts doing their parsing, and experts doing their extolling on all things in the news. It’s a place of tall foreheads and nodding knowers.

This year is no exception. Anytime there’s a gathering of tall foreheads and nodding knowers, the subject of Brexit inevitably rears its ugly head — and a headache it truly is for anyone and everyone trying to come to grips with the complete madness of it all. So, enter Larry, Curly and Moe.

There’s one thing you can say about the Irish: Even though they live on an island beyond another island beyond the continent of Europe, they are firm supporters of the European project, the European Union, the Common Agricultur­e Policy, the Common Fisheries Policy, the European Economic Area, the European Commission, the European Parliament, the European Consilium, the European Social Developmen­t Fund ... the list is endless, the end listless.

All things EU are loved in Ireland. Why? Well, let’s just say that they have been net benefiters of the whole European project. Before they joined the Common Market, as it was back then, there wasn’t a straight mile of road anywhere in the country, farming incomes were a pittance, agricultur­e was in shambles, industry was backward, government was inward looking, and it was a Third World nation looking for second chances. And the only thing that was first class were the carriages on trains running to Belfast.

One man who knows only all too well of the impact of joining the EU on Ireland is Phil Hogan. Right now, Hogan is the EU Commission­er of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs — in effect the minister of agricultur­e for the EU. Hogan hails from County Kilkenny, and has been in elected politics since he was 22. He’s also a rarity in elected politics in that he’s a straight shooter, a man who calls a spade a spade. Indeed, politics now needs more men like him, someone who doesn’t suffer fools lightly, and everyone knows there’s a lot of fools around nowadays. Which is where Larry, Curly and Moe comes in.

Last week, Hogan was the speaker of note at that Kennedy alumni gathering. And as a man true to his calling, he called it as he saw it on Brexit. He likened Boris Johnson, Jacob ReesMogg and Nigel Farage as Larry, Curly and Moe — and warned that May’s plan is dead.

Hogan is a man who’s tight in political terms and in a working relation with Jean-Claude Juncker, the President of the European Commission. That’s why his words need to be heeded by May — and a lot of other Brits too.

“Don’t be misguided by those extremists riding the wrecking ball and calling for the EU’s disappeara­nce,” Hogan says. “Don’t be misled by the rhetoric of Mr Johnson, Mr Farage and Mr Rees-Mogg. They like to see themselves as the Three Musketeers. They are more like the Three Stooges.”

Few will be laughing come next March 29.

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