Gulf News

May’s departure may be welcomed by many in her party, but the Brexit crisis will not end with her going.

A no-deal Brexit will hit Britain hard, causing ripples across EU and the world

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After three weeks of relative quiet on the UK political parliament­ary front, a full-blown war of attrition among members of the ruling minority Conservati­ve party is now under way. And whatever temporary patches that may have covered the deep wounds of the Brexit debate in Britain before, those are well and truly ripped away, exposing ugly and festering divisions within the ranks of that party.

Talks with the opposition Labour party over the past three weeks tried to reach some sort of a compromise over a customs union or protecting the rights of workers once the United Kingdom does eventually leave the European Union. At times it seemed a way forward would be found, and that the Withdrawal Agreement Bill, which has been voted down three times previously by Members of Parliament in the House of Commons, might indeed pass on Theresa May’s fourth time of asking.

The breakdown of those talks, combined with May putting together a list of 10 guarantees included in that Withdrawal Agreement Bill, didn’t go down well with the senior Cabinet ministers who openly vented their opposition to her leadership. This has pushed the UK to the brink of what will be a disastrous no-deal Brexit sooner rather than later.

The past three years of May’s leadership have been overshadow­ed by deep divisions within the ranks of her Conservati­ve party. Those divisions made it impossible for her to find any acceptable way forward in reaching a consensus deal on ending Britain’s 46-year marriage with the institutio­ns, legislatio­n and politics of Brussels. That was never going to be an easy task, and the chasms now within the Conservati­ve reflect that — just as those same deep divisions are evident across British society and in Northern Ireland.

May has now announced her resignatio­n date (June 7). Her departure may be welcomed by many in her party and many up and down the communitie­s and cities of her nation. But this Brexit crisis will not end with her going.

The reality is that whoever succeeds her, Britain is broken and divided. There is a crisis of leadership and a crisis of confidence. The worst possible outcome is that the UK blindly moves towards a no-deal Brexit, one where it’s economy will take a sharp hit, causing ripples across the EU and the global economy. Now, more than ever, Britain needs somehow to find the courage to do the right thing: Leave with a deal.

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