-51: Suspended parliament

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Parliamentarism has demonstrated its limits in many countries on several occasions. But if it would come to break in the UK, which has installed this system in the first place, where it has been the most carefully and effectively implemented, that would be a world-shaking symptom of a political illness of our time indeed. Currently, [[Boris Jonhson]] who still tweets every day that UK will leave by the date he swore on, will have to sign himself a letter already written (by Parliament) to request for an extension. What a personal humiliation ''if'' he has to do that, ''but'' it would be the last possible delay this time, which would still be a defeat given that he publicly and officially stated that he'd rather be 'dead in a ditch' than go back to EU to ask for Brexit delay. In such a configuration, he might leave for someone else to complete the job.
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Parliamentarism has demonstrated its limits in many countries on several occasions. But if it would come to break in the [[UK]], that has this institution as its symbol, which has installed this system in the first place, where it has been the most carefully and effectively implemented, that would be a world-shaking symptom of a political illness of our time indeed. Currently, [[Boris Jonhson]] who still tweets every day that UK will leave by the date he swore on, will have to sign himself a letter already written (by Parliament) to request for an extension. What a personal humiliation ''if'' he has to do that, ''but'' it would be the last possible delay this time, which would still be a defeat given that he publicly and officially stated that he'd rather be 'dead in a ditch' than go back to EU to ask for Brexit delay. In such a configuration, he might leave for someone else to complete the job.
  
 
<center><wz tip="No ''ifs'' or ''buts'', although that's all there is all around.">[[File:no-if-no-buts.png|400px]]</wz></center>
 
<center><wz tip="No ''ifs'' or ''buts'', although that's all there is all around.">[[File:no-if-no-buts.png|400px]]</wz></center>

Revision as of 03:55, 10 September 2019

The parliament is now prorogued. The breath of parliamentary democracy is being held off, the mother of parliaments is hibernating till 14 October (2019), before the Halloween rush when Brexit is due to happen. Its charismatic speaker, Bercow, resigned, and the vote for early elections has been rejected so it seems likely that Boris Johnson will be forced to ask for another report of the exit date. Unless he finds an unexpected or compelling move, he is, indeed, to lose the battle, although he still stands stronger to win the war.

Parliamentarism has demonstrated its limits in many countries on several occasions. But if it would come to break in the UK, that has this institution as its symbol, which has installed this system in the first place, where it has been the most carefully and effectively implemented, that would be a world-shaking symptom of a political illness of our time indeed. Currently, Boris Jonhson who still tweets every day that UK will leave by the date he swore on, will have to sign himself a letter already written (by Parliament) to request for an extension. What a personal humiliation if he has to do that, but it would be the last possible delay this time, which would still be a defeat given that he publicly and officially stated that he'd rather be 'dead in a ditch' than go back to EU to ask for Brexit delay. In such a configuration, he might leave for someone else to complete the job.

No-if-no-buts.png

Brexit is full of surprises. To impose early elections, it has even transpired that the government could have called for a no-confidence vote in itself, which the opposition would then had to reject (effectively recognizing its confidence in the parliament). By refusing early elections, parliament thus forces another report (apparently to end of January 2020), unless the government finds a way but given the short notice this would imply, it would probably be too risky and exert too many tensions. Maybe the PM could promise Gibraltar back to Spain in exchange of this EU country rejecting the extension (which would force Brexit from the EU side) or find another cunning way of this type. He could just not sign the letter, and the force of law would bring the UK out. While suspending Parliament was fully legal, this, on the other hand, would rightly be regarded as an undemocratic coup. There would be much turmoil, but Johnson would have delivered its promise.

Still, such drastic options seem unlikely, so at this very time, it seems Brexit will be delayed. But this looks like a desperate further extension to win meaningless time. Elections are bound to happen. Johnson will win them even more comfortably this time and will be armed with a tougher political arm, possibly with the Brexit party as an active ally. Who knows, Nigel Farage could even be the next Prime Minister.

So my counter is probably to be reset, but what's coming at the end of the countdown looks an even more painful and polarized, asymptotic Brexit.