Why are UK MPs targeting the prime minister and not the deal?












23














Given that the Prime Minister's activity that has given rise to discontent in her own party, that any EU deal is subject to an imminent meaningful vote, and that no alternative candidate nor markedly better prospects for a deal resolving the NI backstop are obvious (the EU will hardly allow the UK a unilateral right to disengage unless the NI situation is resolved satisfactorily), what are the reasons why an MP would write to the 1922 Committee targeting the PM, rather than simply wait the extra day or two, and vote against her proposed deal?










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  • 18




    The PM pulled the vote on the deal, so MPs couldn't target the deal.
    – Thomas
    Dec 12 '18 at 19:38






  • 2




    Because the people who voted have no confidence in her capacity to get an improved deal
    – Valorum
    Dec 12 '18 at 22:03






  • 3




    @Valorum - has anyone suggested that someone else might be able to get a significantly better deal, starting from where we now are? There seems to be conspicuous silence on that point. Apparently nobody has confidence in anyone's ability to get a significantly better deal as of now, than she herself could...?
    – Stilez
    Dec 13 '18 at 0:17








  • 3




    Because the key point isn't a matter of degree, it's a yes/no issue which can't be kicked into the long grass. UK requires certainty that in a short time, there will be no customs boundary NI - mainland UK (national integrity). UK/Ireland requires no customs boundary interfering with NI/Eire (Good Friday peace agreement). EU cannot tolerate an EU/UK boundary without a customs border (EU integrity). Nobody has suggested a solution that might work in a practical sense, hence the backstop, but that lasts indefinitely until an answer is reached. So unlike many cases, a better negotiator ...
    – Stilez
    Dec 13 '18 at 9:51








  • 2




    Do you mean Conservative MPs specifically? Labour is targeting for a change of government, for reasons that are not particularly hard to understand.
    – gerrit
    Dec 14 '18 at 9:43
















23














Given that the Prime Minister's activity that has given rise to discontent in her own party, that any EU deal is subject to an imminent meaningful vote, and that no alternative candidate nor markedly better prospects for a deal resolving the NI backstop are obvious (the EU will hardly allow the UK a unilateral right to disengage unless the NI situation is resolved satisfactorily), what are the reasons why an MP would write to the 1922 Committee targeting the PM, rather than simply wait the extra day or two, and vote against her proposed deal?










share|improve this question




















  • 18




    The PM pulled the vote on the deal, so MPs couldn't target the deal.
    – Thomas
    Dec 12 '18 at 19:38






  • 2




    Because the people who voted have no confidence in her capacity to get an improved deal
    – Valorum
    Dec 12 '18 at 22:03






  • 3




    @Valorum - has anyone suggested that someone else might be able to get a significantly better deal, starting from where we now are? There seems to be conspicuous silence on that point. Apparently nobody has confidence in anyone's ability to get a significantly better deal as of now, than she herself could...?
    – Stilez
    Dec 13 '18 at 0:17








  • 3




    Because the key point isn't a matter of degree, it's a yes/no issue which can't be kicked into the long grass. UK requires certainty that in a short time, there will be no customs boundary NI - mainland UK (national integrity). UK/Ireland requires no customs boundary interfering with NI/Eire (Good Friday peace agreement). EU cannot tolerate an EU/UK boundary without a customs border (EU integrity). Nobody has suggested a solution that might work in a practical sense, hence the backstop, but that lasts indefinitely until an answer is reached. So unlike many cases, a better negotiator ...
    – Stilez
    Dec 13 '18 at 9:51








  • 2




    Do you mean Conservative MPs specifically? Labour is targeting for a change of government, for reasons that are not particularly hard to understand.
    – gerrit
    Dec 14 '18 at 9:43














23












23








23


4





Given that the Prime Minister's activity that has given rise to discontent in her own party, that any EU deal is subject to an imminent meaningful vote, and that no alternative candidate nor markedly better prospects for a deal resolving the NI backstop are obvious (the EU will hardly allow the UK a unilateral right to disengage unless the NI situation is resolved satisfactorily), what are the reasons why an MP would write to the 1922 Committee targeting the PM, rather than simply wait the extra day or two, and vote against her proposed deal?










share|improve this question















Given that the Prime Minister's activity that has given rise to discontent in her own party, that any EU deal is subject to an imminent meaningful vote, and that no alternative candidate nor markedly better prospects for a deal resolving the NI backstop are obvious (the EU will hardly allow the UK a unilateral right to disengage unless the NI situation is resolved satisfactorily), what are the reasons why an MP would write to the 1922 Committee targeting the PM, rather than simply wait the extra day or two, and vote against her proposed deal?







united-kingdom brexit conservative-party theresa-may






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edited Dec 12 '18 at 19:16









Machavity

15.2k44475




15.2k44475










asked Dec 12 '18 at 12:10









Stilez

1,8082616




1,8082616








  • 18




    The PM pulled the vote on the deal, so MPs couldn't target the deal.
    – Thomas
    Dec 12 '18 at 19:38






  • 2




    Because the people who voted have no confidence in her capacity to get an improved deal
    – Valorum
    Dec 12 '18 at 22:03






  • 3




    @Valorum - has anyone suggested that someone else might be able to get a significantly better deal, starting from where we now are? There seems to be conspicuous silence on that point. Apparently nobody has confidence in anyone's ability to get a significantly better deal as of now, than she herself could...?
    – Stilez
    Dec 13 '18 at 0:17








  • 3




    Because the key point isn't a matter of degree, it's a yes/no issue which can't be kicked into the long grass. UK requires certainty that in a short time, there will be no customs boundary NI - mainland UK (national integrity). UK/Ireland requires no customs boundary interfering with NI/Eire (Good Friday peace agreement). EU cannot tolerate an EU/UK boundary without a customs border (EU integrity). Nobody has suggested a solution that might work in a practical sense, hence the backstop, but that lasts indefinitely until an answer is reached. So unlike many cases, a better negotiator ...
    – Stilez
    Dec 13 '18 at 9:51








  • 2




    Do you mean Conservative MPs specifically? Labour is targeting for a change of government, for reasons that are not particularly hard to understand.
    – gerrit
    Dec 14 '18 at 9:43














  • 18




    The PM pulled the vote on the deal, so MPs couldn't target the deal.
    – Thomas
    Dec 12 '18 at 19:38






  • 2




    Because the people who voted have no confidence in her capacity to get an improved deal
    – Valorum
    Dec 12 '18 at 22:03






  • 3




    @Valorum - has anyone suggested that someone else might be able to get a significantly better deal, starting from where we now are? There seems to be conspicuous silence on that point. Apparently nobody has confidence in anyone's ability to get a significantly better deal as of now, than she herself could...?
    – Stilez
    Dec 13 '18 at 0:17








  • 3




    Because the key point isn't a matter of degree, it's a yes/no issue which can't be kicked into the long grass. UK requires certainty that in a short time, there will be no customs boundary NI - mainland UK (national integrity). UK/Ireland requires no customs boundary interfering with NI/Eire (Good Friday peace agreement). EU cannot tolerate an EU/UK boundary without a customs border (EU integrity). Nobody has suggested a solution that might work in a practical sense, hence the backstop, but that lasts indefinitely until an answer is reached. So unlike many cases, a better negotiator ...
    – Stilez
    Dec 13 '18 at 9:51








  • 2




    Do you mean Conservative MPs specifically? Labour is targeting for a change of government, for reasons that are not particularly hard to understand.
    – gerrit
    Dec 14 '18 at 9:43








18




18




The PM pulled the vote on the deal, so MPs couldn't target the deal.
– Thomas
Dec 12 '18 at 19:38




The PM pulled the vote on the deal, so MPs couldn't target the deal.
– Thomas
Dec 12 '18 at 19:38




2




2




Because the people who voted have no confidence in her capacity to get an improved deal
– Valorum
Dec 12 '18 at 22:03




Because the people who voted have no confidence in her capacity to get an improved deal
– Valorum
Dec 12 '18 at 22:03




3




3




@Valorum - has anyone suggested that someone else might be able to get a significantly better deal, starting from where we now are? There seems to be conspicuous silence on that point. Apparently nobody has confidence in anyone's ability to get a significantly better deal as of now, than she herself could...?
– Stilez
Dec 13 '18 at 0:17






@Valorum - has anyone suggested that someone else might be able to get a significantly better deal, starting from where we now are? There seems to be conspicuous silence on that point. Apparently nobody has confidence in anyone's ability to get a significantly better deal as of now, than she herself could...?
– Stilez
Dec 13 '18 at 0:17






3




3




Because the key point isn't a matter of degree, it's a yes/no issue which can't be kicked into the long grass. UK requires certainty that in a short time, there will be no customs boundary NI - mainland UK (national integrity). UK/Ireland requires no customs boundary interfering with NI/Eire (Good Friday peace agreement). EU cannot tolerate an EU/UK boundary without a customs border (EU integrity). Nobody has suggested a solution that might work in a practical sense, hence the backstop, but that lasts indefinitely until an answer is reached. So unlike many cases, a better negotiator ...
– Stilez
Dec 13 '18 at 9:51






Because the key point isn't a matter of degree, it's a yes/no issue which can't be kicked into the long grass. UK requires certainty that in a short time, there will be no customs boundary NI - mainland UK (national integrity). UK/Ireland requires no customs boundary interfering with NI/Eire (Good Friday peace agreement). EU cannot tolerate an EU/UK boundary without a customs border (EU integrity). Nobody has suggested a solution that might work in a practical sense, hence the backstop, but that lasts indefinitely until an answer is reached. So unlike many cases, a better negotiator ...
– Stilez
Dec 13 '18 at 9:51






2




2




Do you mean Conservative MPs specifically? Labour is targeting for a change of government, for reasons that are not particularly hard to understand.
– gerrit
Dec 14 '18 at 9:43




Do you mean Conservative MPs specifically? Labour is targeting for a change of government, for reasons that are not particularly hard to understand.
– gerrit
Dec 14 '18 at 9:43










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















91














Brexit is a submarine made out of cheese. Nobody sane at all thinks there is a good Brexit deal to be had. (Every proposed "good Brexit deal" uniformly assumes they can dictate terms to the EU; that has not proven to be the case).



However, May has been forced (in order to become PM) to pretend there is a good cheese-submarine, and has in fact built a cheese-submarine.



This cheese-submarine is bad. Of course it is, it is a submarine made out of cheese. May has to pretend it isn't bad, because it is the result of 2 years of her leadership.



Everyone else is free to say "that cheese submarine is bad". And they are right. May has to say "no, it is a good cheese submarine", because it is the best cheese submarine one can expect (which isn't very good).



They also say "I can make a better cheese submarine". Which is pretty much a lie; nobody actually thinks they can make a better one. But, it is a lie you really cannot prove to be a lie unless the person making the lie becomes prime minister.



So by stating the clearly obvious "that cheese submarine is bad" and the impossible to disprove "I can make a better one", you position yourself (or your faction) to take over the UK government. At that point, well, you sort of won already. You'll probably try to ship a slightly modified cheese submarine, or maybe just let the cheese submarine sink; that is a problem for another day, after your faction is in control.



Defeating this particular cheese submarine (voting against the brexit deal) does not directly get you control of the UK. In fact, once you do that, you might be obligated to propose a better cheese submarine solution, and that isn't a winning move.



Instead, point out the failures of May's cheese submarine (which are large, obvious and undefendable), and use that to unseat May, then get control yourself. Once you have control, you could even just push forward May's cheese submarine as "the best you can do now that May wasted all that time" or whatever. Or force a hard Brexit, and try to get the country to rally behind you. Or negotiate more time from the EU. Or revoke Brexit, then reinvoke Brexit to get yourself 2 more years of power and cheese-submarine making room.



The important part is, nobody actually has a better cheese submarine plan, but many people do want to have power and be in charge.






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  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Philipp
    Dec 17 '18 at 22:27



















28














Theresa May isn't just being targeted over Brexit, though.




  1. May called snap elections in 2017, in a bid to strengthen her hand. Instead, she lost seats and had to form a minority government propped up by a confidence & supply agreement with the Democratic Unionist Party (where the Tories had outright control before). There's no question she did considerable political damage to herself at this point.

  2. Brexit was always ill-defined during the Cameron era and May was not the chief proponent. Boris Johnson, the most outspoken proponent, refused to run for PM, likely because he knew the Brexit process would be messy (i.e. how the Ireland/Northern Ireland border will work)

  3. May's negotiations over Brexit have not exactly been according to plan. The general idea was to get the UK out from under EU rule but the current deal still leaves some EU power in place. As such, many in May's own party would not vote for it. Since her standing as PM is at stake, May postponed the vote to stave off a no-confidence vote but the political blood is in the water now.






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  • 4




    Small correction to (1). No formal coallition similar to the 2010-2015 Conservative-Lib Dem Government was formed. Instead Theresa May's post-2017 Government is a minority Conservative Gov which has support from Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party in a confidence & supply arrangement. The two parties do not have a formal plan for this Parliament together, but the DUP is expected to vote in favour of the Government in key votes such as the budget
    – Michael Dodd
    Dec 12 '18 at 15:54












  • It's not clear how point 2 relates to the question or to your opening sentence. My best guess is that you're saying May is being targeted because she is not pro-Brexit (although that would contradict the opening sentence).
    – JBentley
    Dec 13 '18 at 0:46





















20














The PM has played this disastrously and is now under fire from at least three sources of opposition:




  • the so-called "ERG", who believe that her deal is bad because it's not Brexity enough. They claim that a better deal with no backstop or a fake backstop is possible, despite all the evidence to the contrary. However, these people probably put in their letters long ago and there's only about 20 of them.


  • the "moderate" faction, who believe that it might be possible to get a less bad deal by being less Brexity; the "Norway+" option. This also includes actual Remainers, although at this stage there's still no obvious Remain leadership candidate (Soubry? Hardly.)


  • the "basic competence" discontents: the government was found to be in contempt of Parliament last week, which was an almost unprecedented condemnation. The government has also started trying to delay the vote on the deal. Cabinet ministers openly brief against their own government and vice versa. The basic ability of the government to function is in question and even Tories are going to get fed up of this after a while.



The deal is not necessarily up for immediate voting, I believe that May could delay it indefinitely because she has control of government "programme motions".






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  • 3




    A good answer, though I think you should strike the word "trying" from the 3rd bullet. The Government has delayed the vote on the deal, removing it from the schedule at short notice. There's no trying, it's been booted down the road wasting yet more time. The ERG's membership, while unpublished is estimated at over 50 by Wikipedia based on subscribers to the ERG's pooled services.
    – Jontia
    Dec 12 '18 at 14:38








  • 3




    @TyHayes as a backbencher I don't believe she has enough popularity with the rest of the party, but anything could happen.
    – pjc50
    Dec 12 '18 at 15:26






  • 2




    @JBentley I have to disagree with your last point. At the very least the full legal advice should have been made available to MPs, otherwise they would be being asked to vote on perhaps the most important matter to come before parliament in half a century without understanding the legal position behind the issue. That would be morally unacceptable.
    – Jontia
    Dec 13 '18 at 13:26






  • 1




    This is a good answer, but it could do with some sources. Today most people who closely follow British politics will know what those points are about, but for posterity and the wider world some sources and pointers would strengthen this answer.
    – gerrit
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:41






  • 2




    The motion was not against the AG, it was against the recipient of the advice. The advice is not given to individuals but to the Cabinet; I would say a more appropriate analogy is if a company sought legal advice but some of the directors refused to reveal it to others. The underlying issue is that the Government is not supposed to mislead Parliament, but trust has broken down, and the purpose of forcing the reveal of the advice was to show how Parliament was being mislead.
    – pjc50
    Dec 13 '18 at 16:41



















14














No-one in the Commons is unaware that any other PM would face the same Brexit challenges, to much the same outcome; but this is about a more important long-term principle than that.



To add to others' points, the issue isn't necessarily the details of May's Brexit deal so much as how she went about getting it. Legislatures guard against executives that deny their power. Since taking office, she has on multiple occasions been forced in a ruling to give Parliament or others more of a say in the process, rather than acceding to the usual separation of powers. Even the countless resignations and dismissals factor into this, as an unstable Cabinet composition concentrates any power seized from the legislature. Her government was recently found in contempt for hiding legal advice from them, because of what it had to say about the deal.



Indefinitely postponing a vote she was very likely to lose, by all appearances because it could damage or end her leadership, after she'd tried to avoid allowing that vote in the first place, was probably the last straw for many MPs.






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  • 2




    This answer is both credible, and also answers the question of "why now" which higher-voted answers mainly don't. The number of letters suddenly increased on a timescale which was completely different to the shambolic incompetence of the government, which has been evident for some time. No one likes to be an ignored, bypassed, spare-wheel at work, and certainly not people with the typical ego and pomposity of a member of parliament.
    – Dannie
    Dec 13 '18 at 13:07










  • Although this is a good answer, it would be better with sources.
    – gerrit
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:38










  • @gerrit Thanks; fixed.
    – J.G.
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:42



















3














May cancelled the vote on her deal and went to see EU leaders with a view to renegotiating it, which was immediately rejected. She can delay the vote until late January, but that leaves little time to do anything else if it is rejected and few people think that there is anything she can do to rescue it.



Reading some of the letters sent to the 1922 Committee, it seems that most of those MPs are unhappy with May's vision of Brexit and her inability to deliver it. They are concerned that the UK will drift into a bad deal or no deal simply by running out of time, and wish to see someone more to their liking take over.



So in answer to the question, by the time they get a vote on the deal it may be too late.






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  • In which case, the EU leaders may now expect there is no deal. The current one probably can't pass.
    – Joshua
    Dec 14 '18 at 0:34










protected by Philipp Dec 13 '18 at 9:30



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5 Answers
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91














Brexit is a submarine made out of cheese. Nobody sane at all thinks there is a good Brexit deal to be had. (Every proposed "good Brexit deal" uniformly assumes they can dictate terms to the EU; that has not proven to be the case).



However, May has been forced (in order to become PM) to pretend there is a good cheese-submarine, and has in fact built a cheese-submarine.



This cheese-submarine is bad. Of course it is, it is a submarine made out of cheese. May has to pretend it isn't bad, because it is the result of 2 years of her leadership.



Everyone else is free to say "that cheese submarine is bad". And they are right. May has to say "no, it is a good cheese submarine", because it is the best cheese submarine one can expect (which isn't very good).



They also say "I can make a better cheese submarine". Which is pretty much a lie; nobody actually thinks they can make a better one. But, it is a lie you really cannot prove to be a lie unless the person making the lie becomes prime minister.



So by stating the clearly obvious "that cheese submarine is bad" and the impossible to disprove "I can make a better one", you position yourself (or your faction) to take over the UK government. At that point, well, you sort of won already. You'll probably try to ship a slightly modified cheese submarine, or maybe just let the cheese submarine sink; that is a problem for another day, after your faction is in control.



Defeating this particular cheese submarine (voting against the brexit deal) does not directly get you control of the UK. In fact, once you do that, you might be obligated to propose a better cheese submarine solution, and that isn't a winning move.



Instead, point out the failures of May's cheese submarine (which are large, obvious and undefendable), and use that to unseat May, then get control yourself. Once you have control, you could even just push forward May's cheese submarine as "the best you can do now that May wasted all that time" or whatever. Or force a hard Brexit, and try to get the country to rally behind you. Or negotiate more time from the EU. Or revoke Brexit, then reinvoke Brexit to get yourself 2 more years of power and cheese-submarine making room.



The important part is, nobody actually has a better cheese submarine plan, but many people do want to have power and be in charge.






share|improve this answer























  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Philipp
    Dec 17 '18 at 22:27
















91














Brexit is a submarine made out of cheese. Nobody sane at all thinks there is a good Brexit deal to be had. (Every proposed "good Brexit deal" uniformly assumes they can dictate terms to the EU; that has not proven to be the case).



However, May has been forced (in order to become PM) to pretend there is a good cheese-submarine, and has in fact built a cheese-submarine.



This cheese-submarine is bad. Of course it is, it is a submarine made out of cheese. May has to pretend it isn't bad, because it is the result of 2 years of her leadership.



Everyone else is free to say "that cheese submarine is bad". And they are right. May has to say "no, it is a good cheese submarine", because it is the best cheese submarine one can expect (which isn't very good).



They also say "I can make a better cheese submarine". Which is pretty much a lie; nobody actually thinks they can make a better one. But, it is a lie you really cannot prove to be a lie unless the person making the lie becomes prime minister.



So by stating the clearly obvious "that cheese submarine is bad" and the impossible to disprove "I can make a better one", you position yourself (or your faction) to take over the UK government. At that point, well, you sort of won already. You'll probably try to ship a slightly modified cheese submarine, or maybe just let the cheese submarine sink; that is a problem for another day, after your faction is in control.



Defeating this particular cheese submarine (voting against the brexit deal) does not directly get you control of the UK. In fact, once you do that, you might be obligated to propose a better cheese submarine solution, and that isn't a winning move.



Instead, point out the failures of May's cheese submarine (which are large, obvious and undefendable), and use that to unseat May, then get control yourself. Once you have control, you could even just push forward May's cheese submarine as "the best you can do now that May wasted all that time" or whatever. Or force a hard Brexit, and try to get the country to rally behind you. Or negotiate more time from the EU. Or revoke Brexit, then reinvoke Brexit to get yourself 2 more years of power and cheese-submarine making room.



The important part is, nobody actually has a better cheese submarine plan, but many people do want to have power and be in charge.






share|improve this answer























  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Philipp
    Dec 17 '18 at 22:27














91












91








91






Brexit is a submarine made out of cheese. Nobody sane at all thinks there is a good Brexit deal to be had. (Every proposed "good Brexit deal" uniformly assumes they can dictate terms to the EU; that has not proven to be the case).



However, May has been forced (in order to become PM) to pretend there is a good cheese-submarine, and has in fact built a cheese-submarine.



This cheese-submarine is bad. Of course it is, it is a submarine made out of cheese. May has to pretend it isn't bad, because it is the result of 2 years of her leadership.



Everyone else is free to say "that cheese submarine is bad". And they are right. May has to say "no, it is a good cheese submarine", because it is the best cheese submarine one can expect (which isn't very good).



They also say "I can make a better cheese submarine". Which is pretty much a lie; nobody actually thinks they can make a better one. But, it is a lie you really cannot prove to be a lie unless the person making the lie becomes prime minister.



So by stating the clearly obvious "that cheese submarine is bad" and the impossible to disprove "I can make a better one", you position yourself (or your faction) to take over the UK government. At that point, well, you sort of won already. You'll probably try to ship a slightly modified cheese submarine, or maybe just let the cheese submarine sink; that is a problem for another day, after your faction is in control.



Defeating this particular cheese submarine (voting against the brexit deal) does not directly get you control of the UK. In fact, once you do that, you might be obligated to propose a better cheese submarine solution, and that isn't a winning move.



Instead, point out the failures of May's cheese submarine (which are large, obvious and undefendable), and use that to unseat May, then get control yourself. Once you have control, you could even just push forward May's cheese submarine as "the best you can do now that May wasted all that time" or whatever. Or force a hard Brexit, and try to get the country to rally behind you. Or negotiate more time from the EU. Or revoke Brexit, then reinvoke Brexit to get yourself 2 more years of power and cheese-submarine making room.



The important part is, nobody actually has a better cheese submarine plan, but many people do want to have power and be in charge.






share|improve this answer














Brexit is a submarine made out of cheese. Nobody sane at all thinks there is a good Brexit deal to be had. (Every proposed "good Brexit deal" uniformly assumes they can dictate terms to the EU; that has not proven to be the case).



However, May has been forced (in order to become PM) to pretend there is a good cheese-submarine, and has in fact built a cheese-submarine.



This cheese-submarine is bad. Of course it is, it is a submarine made out of cheese. May has to pretend it isn't bad, because it is the result of 2 years of her leadership.



Everyone else is free to say "that cheese submarine is bad". And they are right. May has to say "no, it is a good cheese submarine", because it is the best cheese submarine one can expect (which isn't very good).



They also say "I can make a better cheese submarine". Which is pretty much a lie; nobody actually thinks they can make a better one. But, it is a lie you really cannot prove to be a lie unless the person making the lie becomes prime minister.



So by stating the clearly obvious "that cheese submarine is bad" and the impossible to disprove "I can make a better one", you position yourself (or your faction) to take over the UK government. At that point, well, you sort of won already. You'll probably try to ship a slightly modified cheese submarine, or maybe just let the cheese submarine sink; that is a problem for another day, after your faction is in control.



Defeating this particular cheese submarine (voting against the brexit deal) does not directly get you control of the UK. In fact, once you do that, you might be obligated to propose a better cheese submarine solution, and that isn't a winning move.



Instead, point out the failures of May's cheese submarine (which are large, obvious and undefendable), and use that to unseat May, then get control yourself. Once you have control, you could even just push forward May's cheese submarine as "the best you can do now that May wasted all that time" or whatever. Or force a hard Brexit, and try to get the country to rally behind you. Or negotiate more time from the EU. Or revoke Brexit, then reinvoke Brexit to get yourself 2 more years of power and cheese-submarine making room.



The important part is, nobody actually has a better cheese submarine plan, but many people do want to have power and be in charge.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 13 '18 at 13:04









Philipp

38.1k14114141




38.1k14114141










answered Dec 12 '18 at 19:52









Yakk

951310




951310












  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Philipp
    Dec 17 '18 at 22:27


















  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Philipp
    Dec 17 '18 at 22:27
















Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Philipp
Dec 17 '18 at 22:27




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– Philipp
Dec 17 '18 at 22:27











28














Theresa May isn't just being targeted over Brexit, though.




  1. May called snap elections in 2017, in a bid to strengthen her hand. Instead, she lost seats and had to form a minority government propped up by a confidence & supply agreement with the Democratic Unionist Party (where the Tories had outright control before). There's no question she did considerable political damage to herself at this point.

  2. Brexit was always ill-defined during the Cameron era and May was not the chief proponent. Boris Johnson, the most outspoken proponent, refused to run for PM, likely because he knew the Brexit process would be messy (i.e. how the Ireland/Northern Ireland border will work)

  3. May's negotiations over Brexit have not exactly been according to plan. The general idea was to get the UK out from under EU rule but the current deal still leaves some EU power in place. As such, many in May's own party would not vote for it. Since her standing as PM is at stake, May postponed the vote to stave off a no-confidence vote but the political blood is in the water now.






share|improve this answer



















  • 4




    Small correction to (1). No formal coallition similar to the 2010-2015 Conservative-Lib Dem Government was formed. Instead Theresa May's post-2017 Government is a minority Conservative Gov which has support from Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party in a confidence & supply arrangement. The two parties do not have a formal plan for this Parliament together, but the DUP is expected to vote in favour of the Government in key votes such as the budget
    – Michael Dodd
    Dec 12 '18 at 15:54












  • It's not clear how point 2 relates to the question or to your opening sentence. My best guess is that you're saying May is being targeted because she is not pro-Brexit (although that would contradict the opening sentence).
    – JBentley
    Dec 13 '18 at 0:46


















28














Theresa May isn't just being targeted over Brexit, though.




  1. May called snap elections in 2017, in a bid to strengthen her hand. Instead, she lost seats and had to form a minority government propped up by a confidence & supply agreement with the Democratic Unionist Party (where the Tories had outright control before). There's no question she did considerable political damage to herself at this point.

  2. Brexit was always ill-defined during the Cameron era and May was not the chief proponent. Boris Johnson, the most outspoken proponent, refused to run for PM, likely because he knew the Brexit process would be messy (i.e. how the Ireland/Northern Ireland border will work)

  3. May's negotiations over Brexit have not exactly been according to plan. The general idea was to get the UK out from under EU rule but the current deal still leaves some EU power in place. As such, many in May's own party would not vote for it. Since her standing as PM is at stake, May postponed the vote to stave off a no-confidence vote but the political blood is in the water now.






share|improve this answer



















  • 4




    Small correction to (1). No formal coallition similar to the 2010-2015 Conservative-Lib Dem Government was formed. Instead Theresa May's post-2017 Government is a minority Conservative Gov which has support from Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party in a confidence & supply arrangement. The two parties do not have a formal plan for this Parliament together, but the DUP is expected to vote in favour of the Government in key votes such as the budget
    – Michael Dodd
    Dec 12 '18 at 15:54












  • It's not clear how point 2 relates to the question or to your opening sentence. My best guess is that you're saying May is being targeted because she is not pro-Brexit (although that would contradict the opening sentence).
    – JBentley
    Dec 13 '18 at 0:46
















28












28








28






Theresa May isn't just being targeted over Brexit, though.




  1. May called snap elections in 2017, in a bid to strengthen her hand. Instead, she lost seats and had to form a minority government propped up by a confidence & supply agreement with the Democratic Unionist Party (where the Tories had outright control before). There's no question she did considerable political damage to herself at this point.

  2. Brexit was always ill-defined during the Cameron era and May was not the chief proponent. Boris Johnson, the most outspoken proponent, refused to run for PM, likely because he knew the Brexit process would be messy (i.e. how the Ireland/Northern Ireland border will work)

  3. May's negotiations over Brexit have not exactly been according to plan. The general idea was to get the UK out from under EU rule but the current deal still leaves some EU power in place. As such, many in May's own party would not vote for it. Since her standing as PM is at stake, May postponed the vote to stave off a no-confidence vote but the political blood is in the water now.






share|improve this answer














Theresa May isn't just being targeted over Brexit, though.




  1. May called snap elections in 2017, in a bid to strengthen her hand. Instead, she lost seats and had to form a minority government propped up by a confidence & supply agreement with the Democratic Unionist Party (where the Tories had outright control before). There's no question she did considerable political damage to herself at this point.

  2. Brexit was always ill-defined during the Cameron era and May was not the chief proponent. Boris Johnson, the most outspoken proponent, refused to run for PM, likely because he knew the Brexit process would be messy (i.e. how the Ireland/Northern Ireland border will work)

  3. May's negotiations over Brexit have not exactly been according to plan. The general idea was to get the UK out from under EU rule but the current deal still leaves some EU power in place. As such, many in May's own party would not vote for it. Since her standing as PM is at stake, May postponed the vote to stave off a no-confidence vote but the political blood is in the water now.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 12 '18 at 18:12









Michael Dodd

1034




1034










answered Dec 12 '18 at 13:53









Machavity

15.2k44475




15.2k44475








  • 4




    Small correction to (1). No formal coallition similar to the 2010-2015 Conservative-Lib Dem Government was formed. Instead Theresa May's post-2017 Government is a minority Conservative Gov which has support from Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party in a confidence & supply arrangement. The two parties do not have a formal plan for this Parliament together, but the DUP is expected to vote in favour of the Government in key votes such as the budget
    – Michael Dodd
    Dec 12 '18 at 15:54












  • It's not clear how point 2 relates to the question or to your opening sentence. My best guess is that you're saying May is being targeted because she is not pro-Brexit (although that would contradict the opening sentence).
    – JBentley
    Dec 13 '18 at 0:46
















  • 4




    Small correction to (1). No formal coallition similar to the 2010-2015 Conservative-Lib Dem Government was formed. Instead Theresa May's post-2017 Government is a minority Conservative Gov which has support from Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party in a confidence & supply arrangement. The two parties do not have a formal plan for this Parliament together, but the DUP is expected to vote in favour of the Government in key votes such as the budget
    – Michael Dodd
    Dec 12 '18 at 15:54












  • It's not clear how point 2 relates to the question or to your opening sentence. My best guess is that you're saying May is being targeted because she is not pro-Brexit (although that would contradict the opening sentence).
    – JBentley
    Dec 13 '18 at 0:46










4




4




Small correction to (1). No formal coallition similar to the 2010-2015 Conservative-Lib Dem Government was formed. Instead Theresa May's post-2017 Government is a minority Conservative Gov which has support from Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party in a confidence & supply arrangement. The two parties do not have a formal plan for this Parliament together, but the DUP is expected to vote in favour of the Government in key votes such as the budget
– Michael Dodd
Dec 12 '18 at 15:54






Small correction to (1). No formal coallition similar to the 2010-2015 Conservative-Lib Dem Government was formed. Instead Theresa May's post-2017 Government is a minority Conservative Gov which has support from Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party in a confidence & supply arrangement. The two parties do not have a formal plan for this Parliament together, but the DUP is expected to vote in favour of the Government in key votes such as the budget
– Michael Dodd
Dec 12 '18 at 15:54














It's not clear how point 2 relates to the question or to your opening sentence. My best guess is that you're saying May is being targeted because she is not pro-Brexit (although that would contradict the opening sentence).
– JBentley
Dec 13 '18 at 0:46






It's not clear how point 2 relates to the question or to your opening sentence. My best guess is that you're saying May is being targeted because she is not pro-Brexit (although that would contradict the opening sentence).
– JBentley
Dec 13 '18 at 0:46













20














The PM has played this disastrously and is now under fire from at least three sources of opposition:




  • the so-called "ERG", who believe that her deal is bad because it's not Brexity enough. They claim that a better deal with no backstop or a fake backstop is possible, despite all the evidence to the contrary. However, these people probably put in their letters long ago and there's only about 20 of them.


  • the "moderate" faction, who believe that it might be possible to get a less bad deal by being less Brexity; the "Norway+" option. This also includes actual Remainers, although at this stage there's still no obvious Remain leadership candidate (Soubry? Hardly.)


  • the "basic competence" discontents: the government was found to be in contempt of Parliament last week, which was an almost unprecedented condemnation. The government has also started trying to delay the vote on the deal. Cabinet ministers openly brief against their own government and vice versa. The basic ability of the government to function is in question and even Tories are going to get fed up of this after a while.



The deal is not necessarily up for immediate voting, I believe that May could delay it indefinitely because she has control of government "programme motions".






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    A good answer, though I think you should strike the word "trying" from the 3rd bullet. The Government has delayed the vote on the deal, removing it from the schedule at short notice. There's no trying, it's been booted down the road wasting yet more time. The ERG's membership, while unpublished is estimated at over 50 by Wikipedia based on subscribers to the ERG's pooled services.
    – Jontia
    Dec 12 '18 at 14:38








  • 3




    @TyHayes as a backbencher I don't believe she has enough popularity with the rest of the party, but anything could happen.
    – pjc50
    Dec 12 '18 at 15:26






  • 2




    @JBentley I have to disagree with your last point. At the very least the full legal advice should have been made available to MPs, otherwise they would be being asked to vote on perhaps the most important matter to come before parliament in half a century without understanding the legal position behind the issue. That would be morally unacceptable.
    – Jontia
    Dec 13 '18 at 13:26






  • 1




    This is a good answer, but it could do with some sources. Today most people who closely follow British politics will know what those points are about, but for posterity and the wider world some sources and pointers would strengthen this answer.
    – gerrit
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:41






  • 2




    The motion was not against the AG, it was against the recipient of the advice. The advice is not given to individuals but to the Cabinet; I would say a more appropriate analogy is if a company sought legal advice but some of the directors refused to reveal it to others. The underlying issue is that the Government is not supposed to mislead Parliament, but trust has broken down, and the purpose of forcing the reveal of the advice was to show how Parliament was being mislead.
    – pjc50
    Dec 13 '18 at 16:41
















20














The PM has played this disastrously and is now under fire from at least three sources of opposition:




  • the so-called "ERG", who believe that her deal is bad because it's not Brexity enough. They claim that a better deal with no backstop or a fake backstop is possible, despite all the evidence to the contrary. However, these people probably put in their letters long ago and there's only about 20 of them.


  • the "moderate" faction, who believe that it might be possible to get a less bad deal by being less Brexity; the "Norway+" option. This also includes actual Remainers, although at this stage there's still no obvious Remain leadership candidate (Soubry? Hardly.)


  • the "basic competence" discontents: the government was found to be in contempt of Parliament last week, which was an almost unprecedented condemnation. The government has also started trying to delay the vote on the deal. Cabinet ministers openly brief against their own government and vice versa. The basic ability of the government to function is in question and even Tories are going to get fed up of this after a while.



The deal is not necessarily up for immediate voting, I believe that May could delay it indefinitely because she has control of government "programme motions".






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    A good answer, though I think you should strike the word "trying" from the 3rd bullet. The Government has delayed the vote on the deal, removing it from the schedule at short notice. There's no trying, it's been booted down the road wasting yet more time. The ERG's membership, while unpublished is estimated at over 50 by Wikipedia based on subscribers to the ERG's pooled services.
    – Jontia
    Dec 12 '18 at 14:38








  • 3




    @TyHayes as a backbencher I don't believe she has enough popularity with the rest of the party, but anything could happen.
    – pjc50
    Dec 12 '18 at 15:26






  • 2




    @JBentley I have to disagree with your last point. At the very least the full legal advice should have been made available to MPs, otherwise they would be being asked to vote on perhaps the most important matter to come before parliament in half a century without understanding the legal position behind the issue. That would be morally unacceptable.
    – Jontia
    Dec 13 '18 at 13:26






  • 1




    This is a good answer, but it could do with some sources. Today most people who closely follow British politics will know what those points are about, but for posterity and the wider world some sources and pointers would strengthen this answer.
    – gerrit
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:41






  • 2




    The motion was not against the AG, it was against the recipient of the advice. The advice is not given to individuals but to the Cabinet; I would say a more appropriate analogy is if a company sought legal advice but some of the directors refused to reveal it to others. The underlying issue is that the Government is not supposed to mislead Parliament, but trust has broken down, and the purpose of forcing the reveal of the advice was to show how Parliament was being mislead.
    – pjc50
    Dec 13 '18 at 16:41














20












20








20






The PM has played this disastrously and is now under fire from at least three sources of opposition:




  • the so-called "ERG", who believe that her deal is bad because it's not Brexity enough. They claim that a better deal with no backstop or a fake backstop is possible, despite all the evidence to the contrary. However, these people probably put in their letters long ago and there's only about 20 of them.


  • the "moderate" faction, who believe that it might be possible to get a less bad deal by being less Brexity; the "Norway+" option. This also includes actual Remainers, although at this stage there's still no obvious Remain leadership candidate (Soubry? Hardly.)


  • the "basic competence" discontents: the government was found to be in contempt of Parliament last week, which was an almost unprecedented condemnation. The government has also started trying to delay the vote on the deal. Cabinet ministers openly brief against their own government and vice versa. The basic ability of the government to function is in question and even Tories are going to get fed up of this after a while.



The deal is not necessarily up for immediate voting, I believe that May could delay it indefinitely because she has control of government "programme motions".






share|improve this answer












The PM has played this disastrously and is now under fire from at least three sources of opposition:




  • the so-called "ERG", who believe that her deal is bad because it's not Brexity enough. They claim that a better deal with no backstop or a fake backstop is possible, despite all the evidence to the contrary. However, these people probably put in their letters long ago and there's only about 20 of them.


  • the "moderate" faction, who believe that it might be possible to get a less bad deal by being less Brexity; the "Norway+" option. This also includes actual Remainers, although at this stage there's still no obvious Remain leadership candidate (Soubry? Hardly.)


  • the "basic competence" discontents: the government was found to be in contempt of Parliament last week, which was an almost unprecedented condemnation. The government has also started trying to delay the vote on the deal. Cabinet ministers openly brief against their own government and vice versa. The basic ability of the government to function is in question and even Tories are going to get fed up of this after a while.



The deal is not necessarily up for immediate voting, I believe that May could delay it indefinitely because she has control of government "programme motions".







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 12 '18 at 13:44









pjc50

4,2951022




4,2951022








  • 3




    A good answer, though I think you should strike the word "trying" from the 3rd bullet. The Government has delayed the vote on the deal, removing it from the schedule at short notice. There's no trying, it's been booted down the road wasting yet more time. The ERG's membership, while unpublished is estimated at over 50 by Wikipedia based on subscribers to the ERG's pooled services.
    – Jontia
    Dec 12 '18 at 14:38








  • 3




    @TyHayes as a backbencher I don't believe she has enough popularity with the rest of the party, but anything could happen.
    – pjc50
    Dec 12 '18 at 15:26






  • 2




    @JBentley I have to disagree with your last point. At the very least the full legal advice should have been made available to MPs, otherwise they would be being asked to vote on perhaps the most important matter to come before parliament in half a century without understanding the legal position behind the issue. That would be morally unacceptable.
    – Jontia
    Dec 13 '18 at 13:26






  • 1




    This is a good answer, but it could do with some sources. Today most people who closely follow British politics will know what those points are about, but for posterity and the wider world some sources and pointers would strengthen this answer.
    – gerrit
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:41






  • 2




    The motion was not against the AG, it was against the recipient of the advice. The advice is not given to individuals but to the Cabinet; I would say a more appropriate analogy is if a company sought legal advice but some of the directors refused to reveal it to others. The underlying issue is that the Government is not supposed to mislead Parliament, but trust has broken down, and the purpose of forcing the reveal of the advice was to show how Parliament was being mislead.
    – pjc50
    Dec 13 '18 at 16:41














  • 3




    A good answer, though I think you should strike the word "trying" from the 3rd bullet. The Government has delayed the vote on the deal, removing it from the schedule at short notice. There's no trying, it's been booted down the road wasting yet more time. The ERG's membership, while unpublished is estimated at over 50 by Wikipedia based on subscribers to the ERG's pooled services.
    – Jontia
    Dec 12 '18 at 14:38








  • 3




    @TyHayes as a backbencher I don't believe she has enough popularity with the rest of the party, but anything could happen.
    – pjc50
    Dec 12 '18 at 15:26






  • 2




    @JBentley I have to disagree with your last point. At the very least the full legal advice should have been made available to MPs, otherwise they would be being asked to vote on perhaps the most important matter to come before parliament in half a century without understanding the legal position behind the issue. That would be morally unacceptable.
    – Jontia
    Dec 13 '18 at 13:26






  • 1




    This is a good answer, but it could do with some sources. Today most people who closely follow British politics will know what those points are about, but for posterity and the wider world some sources and pointers would strengthen this answer.
    – gerrit
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:41






  • 2




    The motion was not against the AG, it was against the recipient of the advice. The advice is not given to individuals but to the Cabinet; I would say a more appropriate analogy is if a company sought legal advice but some of the directors refused to reveal it to others. The underlying issue is that the Government is not supposed to mislead Parliament, but trust has broken down, and the purpose of forcing the reveal of the advice was to show how Parliament was being mislead.
    – pjc50
    Dec 13 '18 at 16:41








3




3




A good answer, though I think you should strike the word "trying" from the 3rd bullet. The Government has delayed the vote on the deal, removing it from the schedule at short notice. There's no trying, it's been booted down the road wasting yet more time. The ERG's membership, while unpublished is estimated at over 50 by Wikipedia based on subscribers to the ERG's pooled services.
– Jontia
Dec 12 '18 at 14:38






A good answer, though I think you should strike the word "trying" from the 3rd bullet. The Government has delayed the vote on the deal, removing it from the schedule at short notice. There's no trying, it's been booted down the road wasting yet more time. The ERG's membership, while unpublished is estimated at over 50 by Wikipedia based on subscribers to the ERG's pooled services.
– Jontia
Dec 12 '18 at 14:38






3




3




@TyHayes as a backbencher I don't believe she has enough popularity with the rest of the party, but anything could happen.
– pjc50
Dec 12 '18 at 15:26




@TyHayes as a backbencher I don't believe she has enough popularity with the rest of the party, but anything could happen.
– pjc50
Dec 12 '18 at 15:26




2




2




@JBentley I have to disagree with your last point. At the very least the full legal advice should have been made available to MPs, otherwise they would be being asked to vote on perhaps the most important matter to come before parliament in half a century without understanding the legal position behind the issue. That would be morally unacceptable.
– Jontia
Dec 13 '18 at 13:26




@JBentley I have to disagree with your last point. At the very least the full legal advice should have been made available to MPs, otherwise they would be being asked to vote on perhaps the most important matter to come before parliament in half a century without understanding the legal position behind the issue. That would be morally unacceptable.
– Jontia
Dec 13 '18 at 13:26




1




1




This is a good answer, but it could do with some sources. Today most people who closely follow British politics will know what those points are about, but for posterity and the wider world some sources and pointers would strengthen this answer.
– gerrit
Dec 13 '18 at 14:41




This is a good answer, but it could do with some sources. Today most people who closely follow British politics will know what those points are about, but for posterity and the wider world some sources and pointers would strengthen this answer.
– gerrit
Dec 13 '18 at 14:41




2




2




The motion was not against the AG, it was against the recipient of the advice. The advice is not given to individuals but to the Cabinet; I would say a more appropriate analogy is if a company sought legal advice but some of the directors refused to reveal it to others. The underlying issue is that the Government is not supposed to mislead Parliament, but trust has broken down, and the purpose of forcing the reveal of the advice was to show how Parliament was being mislead.
– pjc50
Dec 13 '18 at 16:41




The motion was not against the AG, it was against the recipient of the advice. The advice is not given to individuals but to the Cabinet; I would say a more appropriate analogy is if a company sought legal advice but some of the directors refused to reveal it to others. The underlying issue is that the Government is not supposed to mislead Parliament, but trust has broken down, and the purpose of forcing the reveal of the advice was to show how Parliament was being mislead.
– pjc50
Dec 13 '18 at 16:41











14














No-one in the Commons is unaware that any other PM would face the same Brexit challenges, to much the same outcome; but this is about a more important long-term principle than that.



To add to others' points, the issue isn't necessarily the details of May's Brexit deal so much as how she went about getting it. Legislatures guard against executives that deny their power. Since taking office, she has on multiple occasions been forced in a ruling to give Parliament or others more of a say in the process, rather than acceding to the usual separation of powers. Even the countless resignations and dismissals factor into this, as an unstable Cabinet composition concentrates any power seized from the legislature. Her government was recently found in contempt for hiding legal advice from them, because of what it had to say about the deal.



Indefinitely postponing a vote she was very likely to lose, by all appearances because it could damage or end her leadership, after she'd tried to avoid allowing that vote in the first place, was probably the last straw for many MPs.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    This answer is both credible, and also answers the question of "why now" which higher-voted answers mainly don't. The number of letters suddenly increased on a timescale which was completely different to the shambolic incompetence of the government, which has been evident for some time. No one likes to be an ignored, bypassed, spare-wheel at work, and certainly not people with the typical ego and pomposity of a member of parliament.
    – Dannie
    Dec 13 '18 at 13:07










  • Although this is a good answer, it would be better with sources.
    – gerrit
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:38










  • @gerrit Thanks; fixed.
    – J.G.
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:42
















14














No-one in the Commons is unaware that any other PM would face the same Brexit challenges, to much the same outcome; but this is about a more important long-term principle than that.



To add to others' points, the issue isn't necessarily the details of May's Brexit deal so much as how she went about getting it. Legislatures guard against executives that deny their power. Since taking office, she has on multiple occasions been forced in a ruling to give Parliament or others more of a say in the process, rather than acceding to the usual separation of powers. Even the countless resignations and dismissals factor into this, as an unstable Cabinet composition concentrates any power seized from the legislature. Her government was recently found in contempt for hiding legal advice from them, because of what it had to say about the deal.



Indefinitely postponing a vote she was very likely to lose, by all appearances because it could damage or end her leadership, after she'd tried to avoid allowing that vote in the first place, was probably the last straw for many MPs.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    This answer is both credible, and also answers the question of "why now" which higher-voted answers mainly don't. The number of letters suddenly increased on a timescale which was completely different to the shambolic incompetence of the government, which has been evident for some time. No one likes to be an ignored, bypassed, spare-wheel at work, and certainly not people with the typical ego and pomposity of a member of parliament.
    – Dannie
    Dec 13 '18 at 13:07










  • Although this is a good answer, it would be better with sources.
    – gerrit
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:38










  • @gerrit Thanks; fixed.
    – J.G.
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:42














14












14








14






No-one in the Commons is unaware that any other PM would face the same Brexit challenges, to much the same outcome; but this is about a more important long-term principle than that.



To add to others' points, the issue isn't necessarily the details of May's Brexit deal so much as how she went about getting it. Legislatures guard against executives that deny their power. Since taking office, she has on multiple occasions been forced in a ruling to give Parliament or others more of a say in the process, rather than acceding to the usual separation of powers. Even the countless resignations and dismissals factor into this, as an unstable Cabinet composition concentrates any power seized from the legislature. Her government was recently found in contempt for hiding legal advice from them, because of what it had to say about the deal.



Indefinitely postponing a vote she was very likely to lose, by all appearances because it could damage or end her leadership, after she'd tried to avoid allowing that vote in the first place, was probably the last straw for many MPs.






share|improve this answer














No-one in the Commons is unaware that any other PM would face the same Brexit challenges, to much the same outcome; but this is about a more important long-term principle than that.



To add to others' points, the issue isn't necessarily the details of May's Brexit deal so much as how she went about getting it. Legislatures guard against executives that deny their power. Since taking office, she has on multiple occasions been forced in a ruling to give Parliament or others more of a say in the process, rather than acceding to the usual separation of powers. Even the countless resignations and dismissals factor into this, as an unstable Cabinet composition concentrates any power seized from the legislature. Her government was recently found in contempt for hiding legal advice from them, because of what it had to say about the deal.



Indefinitely postponing a vote she was very likely to lose, by all appearances because it could damage or end her leadership, after she'd tried to avoid allowing that vote in the first place, was probably the last straw for many MPs.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 13 '18 at 14:42

























answered Dec 12 '18 at 19:31









J.G.

673314




673314








  • 2




    This answer is both credible, and also answers the question of "why now" which higher-voted answers mainly don't. The number of letters suddenly increased on a timescale which was completely different to the shambolic incompetence of the government, which has been evident for some time. No one likes to be an ignored, bypassed, spare-wheel at work, and certainly not people with the typical ego and pomposity of a member of parliament.
    – Dannie
    Dec 13 '18 at 13:07










  • Although this is a good answer, it would be better with sources.
    – gerrit
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:38










  • @gerrit Thanks; fixed.
    – J.G.
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:42














  • 2




    This answer is both credible, and also answers the question of "why now" which higher-voted answers mainly don't. The number of letters suddenly increased on a timescale which was completely different to the shambolic incompetence of the government, which has been evident for some time. No one likes to be an ignored, bypassed, spare-wheel at work, and certainly not people with the typical ego and pomposity of a member of parliament.
    – Dannie
    Dec 13 '18 at 13:07










  • Although this is a good answer, it would be better with sources.
    – gerrit
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:38










  • @gerrit Thanks; fixed.
    – J.G.
    Dec 13 '18 at 14:42








2




2




This answer is both credible, and also answers the question of "why now" which higher-voted answers mainly don't. The number of letters suddenly increased on a timescale which was completely different to the shambolic incompetence of the government, which has been evident for some time. No one likes to be an ignored, bypassed, spare-wheel at work, and certainly not people with the typical ego and pomposity of a member of parliament.
– Dannie
Dec 13 '18 at 13:07




This answer is both credible, and also answers the question of "why now" which higher-voted answers mainly don't. The number of letters suddenly increased on a timescale which was completely different to the shambolic incompetence of the government, which has been evident for some time. No one likes to be an ignored, bypassed, spare-wheel at work, and certainly not people with the typical ego and pomposity of a member of parliament.
– Dannie
Dec 13 '18 at 13:07












Although this is a good answer, it would be better with sources.
– gerrit
Dec 13 '18 at 14:38




Although this is a good answer, it would be better with sources.
– gerrit
Dec 13 '18 at 14:38












@gerrit Thanks; fixed.
– J.G.
Dec 13 '18 at 14:42




@gerrit Thanks; fixed.
– J.G.
Dec 13 '18 at 14:42











3














May cancelled the vote on her deal and went to see EU leaders with a view to renegotiating it, which was immediately rejected. She can delay the vote until late January, but that leaves little time to do anything else if it is rejected and few people think that there is anything she can do to rescue it.



Reading some of the letters sent to the 1922 Committee, it seems that most of those MPs are unhappy with May's vision of Brexit and her inability to deliver it. They are concerned that the UK will drift into a bad deal or no deal simply by running out of time, and wish to see someone more to their liking take over.



So in answer to the question, by the time they get a vote on the deal it may be too late.






share|improve this answer





















  • In which case, the EU leaders may now expect there is no deal. The current one probably can't pass.
    – Joshua
    Dec 14 '18 at 0:34
















3














May cancelled the vote on her deal and went to see EU leaders with a view to renegotiating it, which was immediately rejected. She can delay the vote until late January, but that leaves little time to do anything else if it is rejected and few people think that there is anything she can do to rescue it.



Reading some of the letters sent to the 1922 Committee, it seems that most of those MPs are unhappy with May's vision of Brexit and her inability to deliver it. They are concerned that the UK will drift into a bad deal or no deal simply by running out of time, and wish to see someone more to their liking take over.



So in answer to the question, by the time they get a vote on the deal it may be too late.






share|improve this answer





















  • In which case, the EU leaders may now expect there is no deal. The current one probably can't pass.
    – Joshua
    Dec 14 '18 at 0:34














3












3








3






May cancelled the vote on her deal and went to see EU leaders with a view to renegotiating it, which was immediately rejected. She can delay the vote until late January, but that leaves little time to do anything else if it is rejected and few people think that there is anything she can do to rescue it.



Reading some of the letters sent to the 1922 Committee, it seems that most of those MPs are unhappy with May's vision of Brexit and her inability to deliver it. They are concerned that the UK will drift into a bad deal or no deal simply by running out of time, and wish to see someone more to their liking take over.



So in answer to the question, by the time they get a vote on the deal it may be too late.






share|improve this answer












May cancelled the vote on her deal and went to see EU leaders with a view to renegotiating it, which was immediately rejected. She can delay the vote until late January, but that leaves little time to do anything else if it is rejected and few people think that there is anything she can do to rescue it.



Reading some of the letters sent to the 1922 Committee, it seems that most of those MPs are unhappy with May's vision of Brexit and her inability to deliver it. They are concerned that the UK will drift into a bad deal or no deal simply by running out of time, and wish to see someone more to their liking take over.



So in answer to the question, by the time they get a vote on the deal it may be too late.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 12 '18 at 16:31









user

6,37021330




6,37021330












  • In which case, the EU leaders may now expect there is no deal. The current one probably can't pass.
    – Joshua
    Dec 14 '18 at 0:34


















  • In which case, the EU leaders may now expect there is no deal. The current one probably can't pass.
    – Joshua
    Dec 14 '18 at 0:34
















In which case, the EU leaders may now expect there is no deal. The current one probably can't pass.
– Joshua
Dec 14 '18 at 0:34




In which case, the EU leaders may now expect there is no deal. The current one probably can't pass.
– Joshua
Dec 14 '18 at 0:34





protected by Philipp Dec 13 '18 at 9:30



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