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United Kingdom Politics

Theresa May, Undone by Brexit, To Resign as UK Prime Minister (nytimes.com) 808

Prime Minister Theresa May of Britain surrendered to mounting pressure from her lawmakers on Friday and said she would step aside as leader, after almost three years of trying and failing to lead Britain out of the European Union. From a report: Mrs. May said she would stand aside as leader of the Conservative Party on June 7, but remain as prime minister until a successor was chosen. Though she still has a little more time in Downing Street, the announcement puts an end to one of the most turbulent -- and at times shambolic -- premierships in recent British history. Her departure is likely to set off a vicious contest to succeed her within the governing Conservative Party. In truth, Mrs. May's rivals have been jockeying for position for months as her authority ebbed and lawmakers, and ultimately cabinet ministers, mutinied. Speaking outside 10 Downing Street, Mrs. May acknowledged that she had been unable to persuade lawmakers to support her plan to pull Britain out of the European Union, despite her best efforts. "I believe I was right to persevere, even when the odds against success seemed high," she said. "But it is now clear to me that it is in the best interests of the country for a new prime minister to lead that effort." Her failure to reach a deal, she said, would remain a matter of "deep regret." Voice cracking, she noted at the end that she was "the second female prime minister, but certainly not the last."
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Theresa May, Undone by Brexit, To Resign as UK Prime Minister

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  • Wait for it... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @05:44AM (#58646316)

    If you think Theresa May was bad, wait until Boris Johnson takes over.

    And sadly, that's a very real possibility.

    • by Mr. Dollar Ton ( 5495648 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @05:52AM (#58646334)

      the best argument against democracy is a 5 minute conversation with a typical voter.

      And when he said "a democracy" and "typical voter" he meant Brexitannia and its typical voter.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @06:14AM (#58646382)

        Oh, yes. I recently read an interview with some fisher that voted for Brexit. His argument was that "It will be out waters again!", but he had some real fears that he could not sell his mussels in the EU anymore.

        Are these people utterly demented and understand absolutely nothing? Of course, he will not be able to export to the EU anymore. Or if he can, he will have to do so at much, much worse prices. And he will have to respect all restrictions he has now, plus some additional ones. And that is completely obvious. The Brexit is really people voting for their own demise, because they are far too stupid to see it.

        • by DNS-and-BIND ( 461968 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @06:32AM (#58646436) Homepage
          "You're too stupid to know what we judged is best for you, you morons! Vote for us!" For some reason that isn't appealing to voters; I wonder why that could be?
        • by Kokuyo ( 549451 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @07:08AM (#58646586) Journal

          Well, I DO understand the misgivings about the EU. We just had a completely gut-feely vote on a EU gun law we were supposed to implement.

          Not only does it go against our constitution because that clearly states that a low MUST be effective towards the cause the law wants to tackle and it's use must be in a proper relation to the cost.

          Now we have a law that the EU can automatically change according to its whim every five years that is supposed to help fight terrorism, when NONE of the mentioned guns have ever been used in terrorist acts. And it incurs a whole lot of bureaucracy. It basically contains a passage that says every gun part must have like three 14 characters serial numbers. Or was it 24 characters?

          Anyway, good luck putting that many characters legibly on a recoil spring.

          Basically all the weapons used in gun sports or collections are now banned and while they promised that it would be no issue getting special dispensation, this is all now at the whim of government drones.

          And you wouldn't believe the lies the press spread beforehand. Ye gods!

          "We" also voted in a package law that combined retirement funds and corporate taxing. Both cost us a billion more a year yet they acted like we get more pension for the minus we incur with the new corporate taxation. And now shortly after the voting is done, not only does the press rub in our faces that the gun ban is rather silly, they also go "Well, you didn't really think that would do enough for your pension, right? Expect to vote on even more taxes to prop up your pension funds in a bout a year".

          And people go "Well, that's politicians for you, what're ya gonna do?"

          I'm telling you in the span of five years I have gone from pretty liberal to pretty conservative and I tell you one thing: If I actually was made dictator? Yeah, first thing I'd do is opening concentration camps.

          I am so done with people.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @07:38AM (#58646710) Homepage Journal

            Even if true (I'm not going to bother checking, it's not important) what is the best course of action here?

            A) Brexit, tank the economy, people die from poverty and we are all even more miserable than usual

            B) Try to reform the EU from the inside, along with other EU leaders who are keen to do the same

            The UK could be a powerhouse in Europe, a leader and major influencer. We have immense soft power, and are completely squandering it. And for what, so we can be force fed chlorine chicken by Donald Trump? Yay freedom?

            • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @08:02AM (#58646790)

              Also remember that when the UK joined, they were is so bad shape economically that they got special conditions. Apparently, some people what that state of affairs back.

              Well, my take is that as soon as the current crop of abysmal "leaders" the UK has is dead, disgraced or otherwise contained, the UK will come crawling back and ask for EU admission. I just hope there will be no special conditions that time, the UK needs to realize were they really stand. Granted, your plan B) would be hugely preferable, but apparently plan A) it is because arrogance, stupidity and disconnectedness-from-reality have reached never before observed levels in the UK ruling class.

              • by Zocalo ( 252965 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @09:41AM (#58647260) Homepage
                That would absolutely be the case in the event the UK were to leave and then, at some point in the future, decide to rejoin the EU. The conditions of membership have changed since 1973 and there are now no exemptions on things like free movement (including Schengen), adopting the Euro, and so on, plus little to no chance of any "special arrangements" other than those proportionate to the state of our economy at the time. The first two alone are likely to mean there will either be a significant delay (probably needing at least one generation to "age out") before the idea becomes palatable, or for the economy to be so bad that it's undeniably a better option. The UK does have a pretty good track record of failing to care for those near or below the poverty line though (and has been repeatedly slammed by the UN for it), so even if we immediately plunge into recession following a hard Brexit and unemployment skyrockets I doubt that'll matter one jot to those who are still financially afloath, so either way it's not going to be quick. Frankly, I can see Scotland gaining independance an rejoining the EU in its own right before I can see England and the rest of Little Britain rejoining.
            • Do you really want the same bunch of clowns that lead the UK reform the EU?
              No thank you. I'll pass. The UK has been altogether a bad influence on the EU, stopping sensible directives.

            • by Kokuyo ( 549451 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @09:07AM (#58647076) Journal

              We are not even a real part of the EU. I'm Swiss! This is only Schengen/Dublin shenanigans!

              It's just that this thing on top of other incidents lately, not least the copyright law make a lot of people think the EU is led by a horde of baboons.

              I understand the Brits being leery of the EU and as I've noticed most voters are too dumb to be trusted with democracy.

              I was a fan of the concept of the EU. The basic idea was splendid but leave it to a bunch of people with opinions and nothing more to bastardize it to the point of idiocy.

            • First of all, Trump had nothing to do with this. Time to stop blaming your problems on everyone else but you.

              Second, the UK is a power house in Europe, it is a leader and a major influence. It has been for centuries.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @07:22AM (#58646636) Homepage Journal

          The fishing industry is in for a nasty surprise if we brexit.

          First the EU will demand they stick to EU quotas or face tariffs designed to limit the amount of fish they catch by reducing sales. It's the only ecologically responsible move.

          Then they will find that politicians are happy to barter away "their" fishing rights to save other industries from ruin, because actually there aren't that many fishermen and their are all in poor Labour voting constituencies anyway.

          It's funny how the industries that will be devastated by brexit are also the ones where the workers voted for it. Steel, car manufacturing, fishing, farming...

          • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @07:37AM (#58646708)

            The fishing industry is in for a nasty surprise if we brexit.

            First the EU will demand they stick to EU quotas or face tariffs designed to limit the amount of fish they catch by reducing sales. It's the only ecologically responsible move.

            It's the same with any export-reliant UK industry: just by proximity the EU is going to be one of their biggest markets. And, since as a bloc they are much larger than the UK, they hold all the cards. If the UK wants to trade with the EU, it will be on the EU's terms. They'll still be playing by the same rules they were before Brexit, but if they leave, they give up their ability to have a say in those rules.

        • by Zocalo ( 252965 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @08:47AM (#58647000) Homepage
          Fishing is one of the clearest cases of lack of understanding of consequences there is. Sure, "It'll be our waters again", but what they're not considering is that also means that the EU's waters will be their waters as well. You don't want the EU fishing in our waters? Then don't expect them to let you fish in theirs. Still OK with that, then go and get a map and look at what EEZs and maritime law mean in regards to where you can drop your nets - a line bisecting the North Sea, English Channel and Irish Sea, plus a nice fat "no-go" zone around Iceland, Ireland, Norway, and (more crucially) around the Danish controlled Faroes (half way between Scotland and Iceland for those unaware). If you're a deep sea fisherman that means you've either got a small areas of the Norwegian Sea to fish in, or you've got an awfully long way to to get into the North Atlantic before you can legally drop your nets. Cod Wars II, anyone?
      • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @07:12AM (#58646598) Journal
        The best argument against democracy is a 5 minute conversation with a typical politician

        Voters continue to surprise me. The Dutch referendum on the EU agreement with the Ukraine started as something of a joke* and it's not exactly a topic close to voters' hearts, but as the date neared, it was interesting to see how many people made an effort to inform themselves about this issue. And how many people weren't fooled by the usual propaganda from both sides: "it's only a trade agreement" (it wasn't), "it will give Ukrainians full access to our internal market" (not the case), etc. In fact a lot of people seemed to be better informed than many of the politicians who are supposed to decide on this matter*, like the leader of the Democrats '66 party who, when asked by a reported, glibly answered: "No I do not know the details of this agreement". Of course he has his staff to advise him, but how well informed are they, and what are they telling him?

        *) The Dutch advisory referendum could be applied to any bill coming under a vote in parliament, if enough people signed a petition to do so. The referendum appeared to be designed to make it rather hard to collect the necessary physical signatures, ensuring that only traditional civic movements like labour unions or environmental groups would be able to muster the manpower to make this happen. That is, until the somewhat irreverent blog GeenStijl figured out a legal way to allow people to sign the petition for a referendum electronically, lowering the threshold. The referendum on the EU-Ukraine deal was their test case of sorts.

        There has been one other poll before referenda were abolished in 2018. Interestingly, the law to abolish referenda was in itself eligible for a referendum. By the express wish of the responsible minister, but against strong advice from pretty much any subject matter expert not associated with the government, a legally somewhat dubious way was found to exempt this law from a referendum.
      • by DrYak ( 748999 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @07:53AM (#58646762) Homepage

        the best argument against democracy is a 5 minute conversation with a typical voter.

        Some parts of the world that have practiced direct democracy for long swathes of their history beg to differ.
        Yes, somebody is going to say that it actually only work in very small communities like the Athenian assembly, but I don't agree...

        And when he said "a democracy" and "typical voter" he meant Brexitannia and its typical voter.

        ...which brings it closer to the actual problems:

        Voters education and tradition.
        In countries where voting is traditional like Switzerland, the whole population is used to the thing and is used to participate semi-regularly.
        (Votations are on multiple dates each year. Except that only a part of the population bothers to show up and cast votes. But still, beside the people that don't care enough to vote and should complain if they don't like the result, there are people who vote regularly)
        If you're used to give you opinion every couple of months, you get used to gather information (both the official leaflet explaining the question semi-neutrally that are distributed along with the ballot, but also from press, political debates, etc.)
        You get also used to actually express *your opinion on the actual question*.

        Compare the situation with Brexit: people are only asked to vote every once in a blue moon.
        They aren't used to gather information, they'll fall for whatever sound bite gets popular on the twitter echo-chamber, and usually negative emotions (such as hate) are much easy to spread than rational conversations (due to peculiarities in human psyche).
        Also they aren't used to express their opinion *on the question themselves*. Instead they take the rare opportunity of being asked a question to express their general discontent with the government and reject whatever.
        ( ^- this seems even more visible on the few rare occasion when France was voting on something. People were using the occasion to express their anger. Kind of natural in a country where "public demonstrations" seem to be the national sport :-P ).

        It's not that the average voter - i.e.: the general population - is too stupid to be allowed to vote. It's the other way around, in order for the vote to be meaningful, you need to educate the people about how to make the most out of direct democracy.
        Saying "people are stupid, so don't let them vote" is stupid in itself. You should be saying "people are stupid, so educate them so they can vote".

        Also, most government tend to be top-down: lawmakers make law.
        Some democracies try to also provide bottom-up approaches. To cite again Switzerland, Popular Initiative are a thing. As in if the general population has an idea of a law proposal, they can try to gather signatures and if enough are collected (to show that there is indeed a general intrest in that idea), the proposal WILL BE submitted to vote.
        Another poster within the conversation thread mentioned a similar system in the Netherland.

        If people feel that they can influence the politics (given enough interests), they feel a lot less powerless, they thus find themselves much more interested in actively taking part and informing themselves, and a lot less likely to just reject random thing to show protest.

        Not that much the case in countries were the only way to influence politics is to vote for a different politician the next time.

        ---

        And to go back to the "only in small communities like Athens" meme that regularly pop-up whenever somebody brings up the difference between "direct democracy" (true democracy) and what some call "representative democracy" (some weird type of oligarchy):

        It's not as much a problem of size of community, as a problem of means of communication.
        The popular needs efficient ways to gather information, the government needs an efficient way to collect the voters decision.

        (That's the reason why the US went for a "representative democracy

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The worst thing in the UK is that people have been convinced that they are informed, when they know literally less than nothing.

          The EU is the worst affected. Decades of lies in the right-wing press and from politicians blaming it for their own failings, and taking credit for its successes. People think they know what the EU is and what it does, but everything they know is a lie.

          The recent EU elections are a perfect example. Even days before people were parroting the lines about how the EU is an undemocratic

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by Anonymous Coward

            The worst thing in the UK is that people have been convinced that they are informed, when they know literally less than nothing.

            But let me guess, you're the exception? You're one of the few enlightened individuals?

            The reason brexit passed was because people such as yourself have no idea what's going on in the country outside of the cities. I'm in the US, but I travel to the UK moderately often. And if you talk to the more rural parts, the EU has not been good to them. They're desperate, and the people in London ignore their issues. Brexit is a result of those in the ivory towers ignoring the reality that surrounds them. Seriou

            • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

              I like in Scotland, and in the countryside. All areas of Scotland vote to remain. Most people I talk to are either clueless and/or delusional about the EU and voted leave, or informed and voted remain.

        • by radarskiy ( 2874255 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @10:31AM (#58647556)

          "voting is traditional like Switzerland"

          Unless you are a woman. Women did not gain the vote in federal elections until 1971, and local elections in the last canton did not allow women to vote until 1990... when it was imposed by a federal court decision.

      • Nope.

        You have made a key mistake, assuming Democracy is supposed to give a good leader.

        Democracy's primary purpose is to make sure that no bad leader stays in power for very long. It allows for an easy bloodless coup. That's it's main advantage, most other forms of government require violence to remove bad leaders.

    • by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @06:53AM (#58646532)

      It is so refreshing to see politicians that resign when they can't lead on their agendas. It doesn't mean they are failures. It means they didn't succeed this time. It's a lot like the trait we tend to admire in silicon valley where people lead startups aggressively and often fail. But something got tried, things were explored. Maybe they don't work out but things go on. The frustration in US politics is that failure is death. SO people entrench themselves in unassailable fortresses. You get people like Trent Lott, and Nancy pelosi, and Mr Turtle who accountably stick around like a fart in a phone box just because they have power not because they lead with it.

      Yeah for May. And especially Yeah for having the sense to resign and let someone else have a crack. If Boris sucks it won't be for long. Not much harm in trying.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @10:01AM (#58647378) Homepage Journal

        That's not what happened here.

        May failed back in 2017. She called an election and lost her party's majority, meaning she had to bribe the DUP with £1,000,000,000 to support her. And of course that meant that he DUP had a veto over any deal she did, and sure enough they rejected the one she eventually brought home.

        Her plan for brexit was thwarted when Gina Miller won her court case forcing the government to offer a "meaningful vote" on the deal. Until then May had a chance to ram it through, but from then on it was doomed. I don't think May fully realized the ramifications when it happened, only a year later.

        She failed to get her deal passed in Parliament. She failed to get it passed in Parliament a second time. Then she tried yet again, and failed for the third time. She was ready to try a fourth time before being forced to resign.

        And she was forced. No admission of failure, in fact in her resignation speech she tried to claim she had done a good job on things she badly failed at, like the response to Grenfell. Her own party had to dislodge her in the end.

        Whoever takes over won't "have a crack". They are screwed. There is no time left, the EU won't re-negotiate anything, and if it looks like they are obstructing EU business they won't get any further extensions either. Their choices are either another vote (general election or referendum) or crash out with no deal and face economic ruin, losing the next election and the Tory Party breaking up.

        • by jabuzz ( 182671 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @11:02AM (#58647744) Homepage

          Brexit was doomed from the start. The issue is that the sort of Brexit that those who have agitated for Brexit want is fundamentally incompatible with the Good Friday Agreement. In fact they still can't comprehend that.

          The deal that is sometime incorrectly called May's deal is as far away as we can get from the EU while respecting the Good Friday Agreement, but it's not far enough for the Brexiteers and it's too far everyone else.

          Even if we crash out with no deal, the EU have made it clear that future trade agreements will require us to respect the Good Friday Agreement, which basically means regulatory alignment and customs union.

          Heck the Nacy Pelosi have made it clear that a trade deal with the USA won't pass in the House unless the UK is respecting the Good Friday Agreement, which means we back with something that is basically regulatory alignment and customs union and that is the USA talking not the EU.(because a trade deal is not just down to Trump, it has to pass in the House and Senate too).

          Turns out it is harder to break international treaties that are registered with the UN (aka the Good Friday Agreement) than the Brexiteers imagined, though they didn't consider Northern Ireland till after the referendum and still don't get it.

  • Who wants her job? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @05:48AM (#58646324)

    Prime Minister Theresa May of Britain surrendered to mounting pressure from her lawmakers on Friday and said she would step aside as leader, after almost three years of trying and failing to lead Britain out of the European Union.

    It will be fun watching all the arch-brexiteers run for the hills to avoid being offered her job. Taking the job of being the PM of the UK today is a guaranteed political career-ender unless there is a general election and the winner commands enough of a super-majority to enforce some sort of resolution. I don't envy May of having had that job, herding feral cats look good by comparisons. There is no realistic way out of the impasse the UK is in other than to either hold a 2nd-referendum and then either hard-brexit or go tail-between-legs to Brussels to ask if the UK can stay after all depending on what the great British public decide in their infinite wisdom. The third alternative is basically just to voluntarily do a hard Brexit which is effectively identical to the second option. Barring any EU concession on that Ireland backstop issue that the Tories can waive around to save face, I don't see how else this can end. The one benefit of Brexit is that it has allowed us to see EU sceptics at their best and the competence level these people are capable of which does not set a very high bar.

    • by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @05:59AM (#58646354)

      The UK doesn't have to go to Brussels asking to remain in the EU, there's already been a legal judgement that article 50 notice can be revoked unilaterally - the UK can just do it.

      • by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @06:24AM (#58646416)

        The UK doesn't have to go to Brussels asking to remain in the EU, there's already been a legal judgement that article 50 notice can be revoked unilaterally - the UK can just do it.

        They will still have to undergo the ritual humiliation of going to Brussels, interact with all the people they've spent decades insulting and demonising, after utterly failing to reach the sunny uplands of Brexit where there are birds and bees in the lollipop trees at the foot of the chocolate cliffs next to the lemonade fountain. Even if nobody says a thing, they'll still have to go there and eat crow after all the big talk about Brexit/WTO paradise.

    • Well conservative Brexiteers think that after electing a new leader of the party they can go back to Brussels and negotiate a better deal with the EU. Here is what a European Commission spokesman said of that on Thursday according to the Financial Times.

      [The] withdrawal agreement cannot be reopened, cannot be renegotiated,

      So if someone like Boris Johnson, who has no qualms about a hard Brexit, takes over, then a hard Brexit is certainly a possible scenario. Never mind that leaked government papers suggest that trading according to WTO rules will cost between 5.4% and 9.5% of

  • by DNS-and-BIND ( 461968 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @06:26AM (#58646420) Homepage

    Nobody was afraid Brexit would fail. They were worried it would succeed. As far as I can tell, May saw her job as to wreck things beyond repair, so that Brexit wouldn't happen and to make an example of the UK to intimidate other EU countries. Just think of all the people whose heart's desire is to see the UK humiliated and to come crawling back under worse terms for daring to defy the EU.

    Why would anyone want out of the EU? Here's an answer from a true believer who had his eyes opened by Article 13. How the copyright directive changed my view of the EU: Confessions of a hurtâSââSbut not defeatedâSââSEuropeanist. [medium.com] It's a long read, but here's the short version:

    The events that led to the approval of the copyright directive highlight some big issues in how the EU currently works.

    * Credibility. The European Commission commissioned a report and kept it secret because it concluded that "the results do not show robust statistical evidence of displacement of sales by online copyright infringements".

    * Evidence-based policy. The Commission ignored another report commissioned by the Parliament that found "nearly universal criticism" by European academics against the introduction of extra copyright for news sites.

    * Technical expertise. The rapporteur of the directive for the European Parliament said that "a Google image search for "memes" displays a bunch of memes, so [parody] can be recognized [by AI-based upload filters]".

    * No consideration for experts and activists. Criticism and massive protests were dismissed as manipulated by tech giants such as Google and Facebook. This attitude was not limited to representatives in EU institutions, but also journalists.

    * France and Germany misused their influence to push for an ideological, non evidence-based, freedom-threatening reform.

    * Conclusion. As a convinced Europeanist, the writer felt betrayed. In his opinion, this means we need to vote for radical pan-European parties that want to change Europe with radical and ambitious proposals based both on the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union and on scientific evidence.

    • by CrazyBusError ( 530694 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @06:50AM (#58646520) Homepage
      As a hardened British Europhile, I agree - that legislation was an utter travesty.

      But here's the thing - how would that be any different in a 'brexited' Britain? Not only has the government in Westminster shown time and time again that along with having no idea about technology ('banning encryption', anyone?), they're more than willing to throw public interest under the bus in favour of corporate junkets, but without the political backing of the rest of the EU, they'll now be utterly unable to resist the demands of US media companies even if they wanted to.

      Brexit will make Britain into Trump's bitch. And we're all going to get grabbed by the pussy.
    • by aepervius ( 535155 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @09:58AM (#58647352)
      Firstly, brexit was voted on bad info and bad faith on brexiter side, not even counting that judge themselves told that if it had not been a non binding referendum, brexit side would have been found guilty of illegal campaign financing. Secondly brexit vote hapenned before art 13, and it was not based on any REAL EU flaw, just perceived one like the 500 million pound a week bus, the straight banana stupidity and other daily mail stupidity. Thirdly EU will not change their standard, so now if you want to export in EU, you will STILL have to respect the EU standard, but now you will have ZERO vote on it. Finally, you want to torpedoe your own economy ? what for ? Art 13 is not worth it. And I won't even go onto the idiocy of wanting to trade at WTO rule : nobody does it willingly for a good reason. (and don't serve me that "we'll keep EU rule for 10 years WTO allows it" no it does not, firstly that's for new treaty, not for going out of one, secondly that would require EU assent which has no reason for that).

      No the truth is that a few rich people like aaron banks see a great financial opportunity into destroying your NHS, and see opportunity in the brexit upheaval to snap part of the economy for bargain price once it hits rock bottom. You got bambaloozed by rich guys and you don't even realize it.
  • It's about time... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @06:51AM (#58646526) Homepage

    Theresa May should have resigned many months ago. She negotiated a Brexit deal that gave the EU everything the EU wanted. When it failed in parliament, she submitted it again. And again. And it went down in flames every time. Meanwhile, all her government has managed to do is kick the can down the road - extending the period of uncertainty, for the benefit of exactly no one.

    The UK should just take a hard Brexit and be done with it. They already have trade deals in place with various countries, more will follow. Once they're well and truly out, they will just be in the same situation as other European-but-not-EU countries, and they can negotiate the same kinds of trade agreements.

    As for the Irish question: it's not really an issue. The UK does not have to enforce a hard Irish border, and the Irish certainly are not going to do so. It's not actually an issue at all.

    • by swilver ( 617741 )

      That's correct, it's the EU that will enforce that border. Perhaps it is an issue.

      • You mean the EU will send foreign troops into Ireland, to enforce the border? First, that would be extraordinarily tone deaf. Perhaps more to the point: the EU has no personnel for such an assignment. It relies on each country to handle affairs as the EU directs. Ireland would not enforce a hard border - there has been too much blood spilt, and the current peace is too valuable. At most, they might pay some "customs officers" to sit at the border and wave at people passing through.

      • by Zocalo ( 252965 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @09:01AM (#58647052) Homepage
        This. A post-Brexit UK would be free to implement whatever level of checks it wishes on goods entering the UK, including none at all if they wanted (although how is that "taking control of our borders" again?). As with most things to do with Brexit though, the issue of what happens in the other direction has been fudged by the Brexiteers and made absolutely clear by the EU; the Republic of Ireland has a legal obligation to the EU to secure the EU's borders and would answer to the EU if they failed to do so. Yes, I'm sure there would be some frantic efforts to protect the Good Friday Agreement, but as the Brexiteers love to remind us when it comes to the ever shifting goalpost of Brexit Day, what matters is what is currently codified in law, and that is that a hard exit requires a hard border on the island of Ireland.
    • by lorinc ( 2470890 )

      As for the Irish question: it's not really an issue. The UK does not have to enforce a hard Irish border, and the Irish certainly are not going to do so. It's not actually an issue at all.

      Oh! So, all we have to do is to tell the migrants to move to Ireland so that they can freely enter the UK as they wish instead of keeping them in their arrival countries? I'm sure the brexiters will be happy with that.

      Just like I'm pretty sure that a long queue of trucks at the border will never be suspicious enough to result in an increased customs activity that would de facto lead to hrs waiting time...

    • by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

      Theresa May should have resigned many months ago. She negotiated a Brexit deal that gave the EU everything the EU wanted.

      That's what happens you attempt to negotiate with entities, many, many times your size. Negotiate a mortgage with a bank -- they'll get everything they wanted too.

      When it failed in parliament, she submitted it again. And again. And it went down in flames every time.

      That's what happens you attempt to negotiate with entities, many, many times your size. They don't have nearly as much ince

  • Putin Wins! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by scattol ( 577179 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @08:31AM (#58646916)
    The weakening and chaos in Western Europe can only be good news for Putin. Another victory for him? https://www.forbes.com/sites/j... [forbes.com]
  • by OneHundredAndTen ( 1523865 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @09:15AM (#58647120)

    What a very stupid woman. She never tried to strike a wide national consensus - she just forged ahead blindly, making mistakes left and right, and always with the goal of holding together her ridiculous party, to the detriment of the country. Incidentally, the equally ridiculous opposition, led by Jeremy "Dinosaur" Corbyn - a fellow who would have been obsolete and anachronistic already forty years ago - seems to have the same priorities: party first, country next - if at all.

    An appropriate time to remember that countries have the governments that they deserve.

    • In the case of Corbyn its him first party second. Most of labour is against brexit. Corbyn still pretends to be against it, but we all can see his history of promoting brexit and anti-EU rhetoric. Also his refusal of various proposals by members of his party, like second referendum, etc. make it clear that he really does want brexit, just not any of the responsibility.
  • by ledow ( 319597 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @10:32AM (#58647562) Homepage

    "Europe will kowtow to us"
    "They can't afford to lose us"
    "We hold a special place in Europe"
    "We'll negotiate on our terms"
    "They need us more than we need them"

    Or... as reality suggests: Piss off Europe and they'll not deal with you because although you're helpful, they are 26 other countries that had to make compromises to be in Europe too, and you can't have your cake, eat in, and then run off without paying the bill.

    Brexit was short-sighted, giving the people the choice about it was just dumb, but at least the guy who did that recognised "Well, I can't ever negotiate that and have it go well for the UK" and buggered off soon after saying just that to let this one take his place (from the same political party, no less).

    Literally like being at the gym and someone says: "Hey, our gym is expensive, do you want to cancel your gym membership? You do? Oops. Sorry, I didn't mean to bring that up. I'll get my friend here to sort that out with you." and she was stupid/desperate enough for power to jump into that place and try to negotiate a way to both have everyone leave the gym AND give them their money back AND keep the gym owner happy. Which just isn't going to happen.

    Except now we've tried to cancel, we realise that we not getting any of the above, and that actually the gym was a pretty damn good deal compared to all the others around. We may still end up leaving the gym, but it's only us that's going to suffer in any substantial way.

    Meanwhile, the EU are saying that whoever ends up in charge, the deal is the same (because they've done almost nothing but "negotiate" our exit for over 2 and a half years).

    Which means - like it always has - we're no closer to doing one of the only three possible things:

    1) Crashing out, putting our economy on the line against the rest of the world.
    2) Accepting the deal, losing face, possibly protests, paying lots of money, still losing all the benefits of membership.
    3) Cancelling the whole idea entirely and just carrying on how we are (again, possibly protests, but that's about it).

    The only way to do 3) safely is another vote, which she keeps promising but "only if we do 2) ". Which is just dumb. If we don't decide before October, 1) happens anyway (and that's nearly happened and the time limit been voluntarily extended by the EU twice already).

    Any new mug, I mean replacement, will have to just make a decision and do it. And take the consequences. Because any more pandering and the whole party will lose all their leadership and that'll lead to pretty much anarchy on a random basis depending on what happens with a vote then.

    But it'll be another desperate-for-power mug who thinks that this will boost their career and they'll end up holding the hot potato, same as this one did.

UNIX was not designed to stop you from doing stupid things, because that would also stop you from doing clever things. -- Doug Gwyn

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