Mucca Mad Boys
Well-Known Member
Ive said before, barring the backstop, Mays withdrawal agreement is better than the alternative available options, what the ultimate agreement would be though, who knows. The lack of will to find and/or get to a solution is unbelievable ie the EU rightly cant allow the backstop to be unilaterally ended by the UK as it might leave no option other than a hard border, the UK are concerned that the EU will find excuses to lock us in forever (unlikely from what Ive heard but still a genuine concern) so we should have proposed that a significant proportion of the £38bn is payable on the reaching of a trade agreement and/or exit from the backstop, to incentivise a sensible conclusion. Like with any negotiation there needs to be potential benefit and pain on both sides of the argument.
Regarding Soubry, you miss the point, as does she. By all means tell the PM (and her constituency individually if she feels necessary) in private of her concerns and that she will be left with no choice by to resign the whip if they proceed with a "no deal", however, doing all this in public, IN THE MIDDLE OF A NEGOTIATION, is weakening our position and actually making reaching an agreement harder and/or less likely. Most MPs on both sides of the argument appear to prefer to posture in public, rather than actually work to get a deal done.
We’re not negotiating on a Brexit deal though, so people aren’t undermining a negotiation. A deal was ready to be tabled to Parliament, but was deferred because it was going to get defeated heavily. The PM’s own party calls a vote of no confidence in her, she won that, and tried to get concessions from the EU, none were forthcoming. So right now, the options on the table is May’s deal, or no deal. With May’s deal facing certain defeat in the Commons, because it hasn’t reached any concessions, the UK faces a ‘no deal’ Brexit. The opposition and people who disagree with this course of action have a duty to stand up to the government. Theresa May is playing her own political games by deferring the vote because the less time the country has before the deadline in March, the more she can try to strong arm parliament into backing a deal.
I’m happy to agree that May’s deal is probably one of the best deals we could’ve got. However, it still relegates the UK to a vassal state of the EU. It’s not an authentic Brexit and the public should get a vote deciding whether or not it wants to continue with Brexit.