The Scotsman

Brexiteer fantasies are wrecking Britain

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They were doomed to fail from the start, they knew it, yet still they sallied forth to make a stand for Britain. Perhaps Jacob Rees-mogg shed a patriotic tear as he put a cross in the box marked “I DO NOT HAVE confidence in Theresa May as Leader of the Conservati­ve Party”.

The trouble is that a guide to good governance is seldom, if ever, to be found in the pages of historical fiction. Fighting battles you know you are going to lose is not brave, it’s stupid, whether they are physical or political.

So the failed attempt by a minority of Conservati­ve MPS to unseat the Prime Minister – at a critical moment in the Brexit process – was nothing more than an utterly unhelpful distractio­n. The public will wake up today with May still in Downing Street, still struggling to win even small concession­s over the Irish backstop from the EU, and trying keep her splinterin­g party together. And people are likely to wonder, “what was that all about?”

If it demonstrat­es anything, it is an attitude that is all-too-common among hardcore Brexiteers: warnings by respected economists about the adverse effects of a nodeal Brexit are dismissed airily as “Project Fear” despite the lack of rigorous analysis to the contrary; blind faith is preferred to expert advice; romantic fantasy believed over hard truths. These are the people who sold the country an unachievab­le dream and now complain it has turned into a nightmare. The people who, in their own minds but nowhere else, would go to Brussels, issue their demands and watch the EU do its best to please.

Back in the real world, a weakened May continues to lead almost by default as the UK stumbles towards an accidental no-deal Brexit that could wreck our economy for years.

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