Other than having a fresh dose of poison in power I think a lot of hard Brexiteers are in for an immense dose of disappointment if they think anything has really changed.
It was always going to be Boris. I really don't know what kind of PM he's going to be. He seems incredibly out of touch with the real people (not unusual for Torys) and talks a lot of hot air.
Listening to analysis of the cabinet announcements on LBC last night they set up a scenario and as each post was announced it aligned with their projected scenario more and more. The scenario was that Boris has gone in hard on No Deal because it's what would unite the most troublesome elements of his own party at a time that he needed the support to become PM. Now that he's in power he's consolidating that by putting pro-Leavers in key posts but at the same time knows he'll never get No Deal on 31 October through because he'll never get to that date without enough of a push against him and his government. Essentially, he hasn't put together a No Deal cabinet instead putting together a cabinet based on the assumption that he's going to end up enduring a General Election that will force the 31 October.
The idea is that Boris will campaign on a heavy Pro-Leave stance but making all this movement now makes a clear false image that he's at least given it a go of Brexit but timing and circumstances worked against him.
However, in the discussion they also said that Boris would hope to fix the dysfunctional minority government seats they have but would likely fail in the GE to do so leaving the only solution being a coalition with the Brexit Party which they've so far ruled out. Reversing that stance would resolve the impass and Brexit would happen but likely a little further down the line Boris would see the UK fracture with NE and Scotland at risk and the Tories would likely see a collapse of support because they'd be in bed with what is fundamentally the rebranded racist UKIP party.
When it comes to a General Election they suggested that the way things are Labour would be a real concern to Boris because it's doubtful the public see's Corbyn as being the all mighty evil PM in waiting that MP's try to make him out as being but there's little to suggest Corbyn can fix the parties current struggles so a lot would rest on the strength of a Labour/Lib Dem coalition having more seats than a Tory/Brexit one.
I suppose a lot would depend on whether the SNP could see themselves fit to get off their high horse as a one off too in order to secure a Remain, if temporary, government.
But yeah, they thought a General Election was looking the likeliest next event
I have been totally removed from this for the last month or more (mostly as nothing seemed to be happening). What becomes the default scenario as the time runs out? I mean, what stops a No Deal on Oct 31 if no other situation is put in place? Won’t you just crash out eventually due to lack of options (and especially given that’s what Boris and his cronies want)?
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