The Scotsman

The tail that would wag a country

Hardcore Conservati­ve Brexiteers in the Commons appear intent on pushing the UK into a no-deal Brexit

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Hardcore Brexiteers have always been in the minority in the parliament­ary Conservati­ve Party and yet they have had considerab­le success.

In 1993, the normally mild-mannered John Major, then Prime Minister, was moved to describe three ‘Euroscepti­c’ government ministers as “bastards” who he only kept in his Cabinet to avoid them causing trouble outside it.

Eventually, their ideologica­l descendant­s became the tail that wagged the Conservati­ve Party dog and persuaded David Cameron to hold a referendum on the EU. He then discovered to his horror that this tail, with a bit of help from Nigel Farage and co, was strong enough to wag the entire country.

In December, however, they suffered a setback, failing to oust Theresa May as Conservati­ve Party leader in a vote of no confidence. Winning by 200 MPS to 117 was hardly a ringing endorsemen­t but, under current party rules, the contest protected her from another internal coup attempt.

Despite this – and May’s later pledge to quit after securing Brexit – last night the hard Brexiteers sought to change those rules to allow them to have another go at

overthrowi­ng her. They appear to hope to replace May with one of their own number, likely to be Boris Johnson.

It was a move redolent of what they might describe as their optimism, determinat­ion and drive. Others might see it as further evidence of their tendency to believe in – and sell – dangerous pipedreams.

If Prime Minister Johnson risks splitting the Tory party, that’s a price worth paying for them. If he fails to persuade the EU to give the UK a “have-our-cake-and-eat-it” deal, then a no-deal Brexit and the resulting economic damage and job losses are just too bad.

Another theory is that they realise they have no hope of changing the rules or renegotiat­ing Brexit and simply want to create as much chaos as possible in the hope of achieving an accidental no-deal, by preventing any of the other options.

That no-one sensible suggests a no-deal is in accordance with the “will of the people” as expressed three years ago doesn’t seem to matter. This muscle-bound dog’s tail has grown supremely confident of its strength and seeks to push us into a situation we did not vote for. Of course, there is one way to find out what the people think now and that is a second referendum.

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