On Mon, Mar 11, 2019 at 12:42 PM David Garcia <
d.gar...@new-tactical-research.co.uk> wrote:

> A true Democracy: All United in Ignorance-
> Total fucking insanity
> When asked by what is actually happening my reply has become “I know
> nothing!”
>

There are a few people who have not abandoned thinking about Brexit, even
if the prospects are still gloomy. Take this lucid contribution today from
Patrick Maguire, political correspondent of the New Statesman:

Good morning. MPs have voted down Theresa May's Brexit deal for the second
time - by a thumping margin of 149 votes. What happens now?

Westminster's favourite refrain is that nobody has a clue where things will
eventually end up, but we at least can say with some confidence what will
happen today: MPs will vote against leaving the EU without a deal.

Or will they? As of 7am, we know now a bit more about how that scenario
would look in practice: a "smuggler's paradise" in Northern Ireland, where
the UK would unilaterally waive checks on goods crossing the border, and
what the CBI calls a "sledgehammer" to the economy in the form of the
temporary removal of tariffs on 87 per cent of imports.

But despite its attempt to put the screws on MPs, today's government motion
is a curious thing. If passed, it would both confirm Parliament's
opposition to a no-deal Brexit and note that it remained the legal default
on 29 March. That slightly confused proposition reflects the feeling among
many Tories that retaining the ability to jump over the cliff is a vital
negotiating tactic. But with just 16 days to go, that isn't the unequivocal
rejection that Tory Remainers and opposition MPs want and we can expect
that coalition of the unwilling to approve an amendment from Labour's Jack
Dromey and Tory Caroline Spelman, ruling out no-deal in *any *circumstances.

That, for some reason, has prompted a great deal of excitement and gnashing
of teeth. There is talk of the amendment taking no-deal “completely off the
table” and one Leave-supporting minister even told *Newsnight* that it
meant Brexit was dead. It doesn't, and it isn't, for the simple reason that
even at this late stage, the Commons is unwilling to incur the political
pain of deciding what it is for, rather than what it opposes. If it really
wants to stop no-deal two Fridays from now, it will have to actively vote
for something else: an Article 50 extension or a deal.

An unlikely alliance of hard Brexiteers, Conservative Remainers and the DUP
believe they have found the answer in an amendment seeking approval for the
latest iteration of the so-called Malthouse Compromise. It proposes an
extension of Article 50 to May 23rd - the hard deadline before the European
Parliament elections - and a sweetener of cash and assurances on citizens'
rights in exchange for a two-year transition period. It all sounds terribly
sensible but for the fact the EU has never been willing to entertain it.
But even at this late stage it is gaining traction among Tory MPs,
which serves to illustrate the extent to which this Parliament is only
really willing to unite around two things: vague statements of opposition
and solutions that don't exist.

As the exasperation of the EU27 boils over, that isn't a great signal to be
sending to Brussels, which is making increasingly clear that any Article 50
extension the Commons votes for on Thursday will need to serve a
constructive purpose - be it hammering out some identifiable new deal, a
new election or a referendum - and not simply give MPs more time to
disagree.  The EU's willingness to make today's vote against no-deal
actually work on terms that are acceptable to the UK, short of ratifying a
deal, can't be taken for granted. The worrying thing is that in
Westminster, it is. Brexit isn't dead, but it feels increasingly like a
negotiated one could be.

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