...
...
Next Story

Forge a new UK, come what May

If the days after the June 23 Brexit vote reaffirmed Harold Wilson’s dictum that a week is a long time in politics, a fortnight can be more eventful. What started

Published on: Jul 13, 2016 09:19 AM IST
Advertisement

If the days after the June 23 Brexit vote reaffirmed Harold Wilson’s dictum that a week is a long time in politics, a fortnight can be more eventful. What started as a way to assuage Eurosceptic feelings in the Conservative party has led to the most politically turbulent phase in British politics in contemporary memory: a prime minister resigns; aspirations of two high profile Tories — Boris Johnson and Michael Gove — lie in tatters; the Labour leader faces a leadership contest less than a year in the post; the markets are on a rollercoaster; a Remainer is chosen as the prime minister to lead Brexit; and the once Great Britain is diminished in the eyes of many as ‘Little England’.

HT Image
HT Image

The saga of intrigues, opportunism and worse associated with the EU referendum can be expected to be soon reflected in popular culture, but behind the play in newspaper headlines on Theresa May taking over as the next PM — ‘Monday Mayhem’, ‘May Day’, ‘Maggie May’ — the task before her is daunting, to say the least. The second woman PM in British history may be set for an equally historic tenure as the first: Margaret Thatcher. At stake is not only redefining Britain’s vision of itself outside the EU and on the international stage, but also making the best out of a bad bargain by reconciling the many contradictions in negotiations to extricate Britain from the EU. May does not want to trigger off anything until the end of the year Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, which sets out the two-year exit process. But European leaders have signalled their impatience and want to get it over with and move on.

 
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON