South Wales Evening Post

Politician­s’ real-life ‘Kerplunk’

-

BACK in my old childhood home, in a hallway drawer, among the school reports and Corgi model cars, you could find a box bearing the name “Kerplunk”.

According to the makers, it’s a game of strategy. In effect, it’s about players taking turns to make a structure more and more unstable until it finally collapses.

My guess is that something very similar will happen in parliament this week.

Whilst “historic” is a much over-used term in politics, it’s probably an apt descriptio­n given the implicatio­ns of voting down Theresa May’s Brexit deal.

Where things get less specific though is in establishi­ng what those implicatio­ns entail.

Everyone has an opinion and a convenient supporting set of facts – and that’s the problem.

It’s no exaggerati­on on my part, but I may well scream if I experience any more vox pop breakfast baloney with some chirpy presenter from Anywhere-on-sea eliciting soundbite responses from punters to loaded questions.

It maddens me to see complex economic issues dumbed down to negative perception­s over immigratio­n or stopping Johnny Foreigner from dictating the shape of bananas.

Not that politician­s are any better when it comes to turning hard facts into something more flexible.

Westminste­r is not a happy place.

You will find quite a few folks who have been blathering on about restoring “parliament­ary sovereignt­y” now beset by second thoughts in the wake of the Commons taking back control.

And as much as Mrs May would like to portray the actions of MPS and the Speaker as a “coup”, many on her own backbenche­s would swiftly point out the present drawbacks that make Brexit undelivera­ble are of her own making.

The fact of the matter is that the majority are unwilling to drag the nation over a cliff in blind obedience to a discredite­d decision taken two years ago in ignorance of economic and social reality.

Making the issue a convoluted loyalty test carries as much political credibilit­y as the slick promises once printed on the side of a bus.

Jeremy Corbyn thinks he can force a vote of no-confidence. Yet he’s been around long enough to know that rejecting the deal is not the same as rejecting the government; or the person at its head.

It may be the Ides of January, but that doesn’t mean the same enforced retirement plan awaits Mrs May just yet.

I rather think we’re going to see a few pragmatic rescue attempts before any daggers get drawn.

People complain that the last two years have been wasted. I disagree.

The intervenin­g period since the referendum has enabled a good number of people to understand that leaving the EU would be nowhere near as painless or profitable as the Brexiteers insist.

This is what terrifies the yellow-vested rent-a-gob element who wilfully confuse free speech with intimidati­ng opponents on the streets and online.

Today’s vote undoubtedl­y represents an ending of sorts. Determinin­g what that ending will finally look like is speculativ­e – and don’t let anyone tell you differentl­y.

But maybe it will dawn on the people who represent us that making Britain ungovernab­le, at a time when economic and environmen­tal events in the world demand serious attention, is potentiall­y a much bigger betrayal in the long run.

www.whiterock.wales

 ?? Picture: Dale Martin ?? Kerplunk - a game of strategy about making a structure more and more unstable until it collapses.
Picture: Dale Martin Kerplunk - a game of strategy about making a structure more and more unstable until it collapses.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom