InFacts

Is June 3 going to be the crunch week?

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The prime minister is promising to bring the legislation required for her Brexit deal to Parliament in the week of June 3 – setting the stage for what could be a momentous week in British politics.

On the face of things, Theresa May’s chances of getting MPs to back her miserable deal at the fourth try seem slender. The Withdrawal Agreement Bill (“WAB”) will lay out in excruciating detail how she has sold out our country’s interests. We will be turned into something approaching a “vassal state”, as Boris Johnson puts it – following EU rules and trade policies without any longer being at the table making those rules. And we won’t even protect our economy as we’ll only have partial access to our largest market.

What’s more, the prime minister seems to want to stop MPs debating our future relationship with the EU. This is incredibly sketchy as things stand, set out in a vague political declaration which isn’t even legally binding. But at least, under current legislation, MPs are required to approve it in a so-called “meaningful vote”. The WAB is expected to remove this requirement. That would make an already blindfold Brexit doubly blind.

Lots of hardline Tory MPs, including Johnson, held their noses and voted for May’s deal the last time it came to Parliament. Now that Nigel Farage is back with a vengeance screaming betrayal and the Conservative party is preparing for a leadership election, some of these MPs may rediscover their spines and vote against the deal.

On the other hand, it would be wrong to be complacent. In her desperation, the prime minister will throw everything she can into the pot to persuade more Labour MPs to back her deal. Pro-Europeans must keep the pressure on them not to fall for bribes that won’t be worth the paper they are written on.

But let’s imagine that May fails. What happens then?

In one scenario, she finally falls on her sword – perhaps to avoid the humiliation of a special convention of local Conservative party bigwigs on June 15 calling for her to go. At that point, the fight for her crown starts in earnest. But it’s hard to see it ending without a hardliner such as Johnson emerging victorious – and that could well trigger a general election.

Pro-Europeans need to prepare for that eventuality. They must push Jeremy Corbyn to finally come off the fence and unequivocally back a People’s Vote. They must also push the unequivocally pro-European parties – the Lib Dems, Greens and Change UK – to join forces, especially if Farage and the Tories agree an electoral pact.

But with this prime minister, you can never be sure. Predictions of her political death have proved exaggerated in the past – and she might defy expectations yet again. In that case, pro-Europeans need to prepare for more trench warfare in Parliament before we get a People’s Vote.
We also need to prepare the  ground so we win a People’s Vote. That means boldly making the case for staying in the EU – showing how it is the best way to solve the climate crisis, increase our freedom, save the NHS and boost our power.

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This article was corrected after publication to clarify that May’s deal means we would only have partial access to the EU’s single market.

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