Theresa May survived one challenge today, but it was the easiest one. Now she has to sell the deal to parliament.

The Wall Street Journal reports U.K.’s May Gets Cabinet’s Go-Ahead on Brexit Deal.

Following a five-hour meeting, Mrs. May’s ministers gave the green light to a plan that would keep the U.K. bound to the EU for many years after the country formally leaves the bloc in March. The prime minister appeared to avoid an immediate revolt by her own ministers, some of whom have openly criticized her Brexit plan.

However, far tougher battles lie ahead for Mrs. May, as time runs perilously close to the March 29 date of the U.K.’s exit from the bloc. She still must secure approval of the deal in the British Parliament, where she faces open hostility over the plan from both the opposition Labour Party and members of her own Conservative Party.

585 Pages of Legal Gibberish

The WSJ commented the deal "hasn’t been released to the public" but here's the Draft Brexit Proposal.

Deal Denounced

Arlene Foster, the leader of the DUP, said her party couldn’t ”support a deal that could break up the United Kingdom.” Meanwhile a clutch of euroskeptic Conservatives also denounced the proposal for keeping the U.K. tied closely to the EU, with Tory lawmaker Jacob Rees-Mogg branding it “a failure to deliver on Brexit.”

Nigel Farage

51 Tories Won't Back Deal

Brexit Central reports the StandUp4Brexit campaign has the backing of 51 Conservative MPs confident that Theresa May’s deal with the EU will not be implemented.

Deal Math

Theresa May needs the backing of 320 MPs. She has 318 MPs.

Thus, the Tories do not even have a majority. May survives only because of 10 DUP votes.

Assuming there are 51 Brexit supporters who will not back the deal and 10 DUP MPs who will do the same. May will need support of 61 Labour Party MPs.

Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn is against the deal because it's the best way to force a new UK election.

Former Labour MP, Austin Mitchell, Great Grimsby 1977-2015 penned an excellent article We must not pay the EU’s ransom unless and until all outstanding issues are satisfactorily settled.

Now What?

Eurointelligence has some interesting comments on "Now What?"

The 500-page draft agreement must have been one of the first documents in the entire history of the EU that was not immediately leaked to the press.

What we do know is that the negotiators reverted to the old smokes-and-mirrors trick of hiding some of the more controversial bits in obscure language, annexes and protocols. What we know as well is that this is a version of an all-UK backstop.

We remain reluctant to assign numerical probabilities to outcomes, but make the following observations. The chances of parliament approving a deal are not zero. We would not rule out that the EU’s own position will leave at least some of the Remainers conflicted, as well as Tory eurosceptics whose political careers would be jeopardised by early elections. The voting behaviour of MPs could thus very well depend on the opinion polls nearer the time of a vote.

Voting Twice

Our second observation is that the UK parliament might vote twice on the deal - a rejection at first, followed by an election*, followed by a renewed vote*.

Corbyn's Scheme

The withdrawal agreement itself is not in conflict with Labour’s version of a Brexit, as it would leave open the possibility of a permanent customs union. We doubt strongly that Corbyn would want to call a referendum if he were to become prime minister. He would be in the enviable position to blame the mess on the Tories, cut a deal with the EU, and then move on.

Hard to Assess the Odds

Many Tories would be happy to dump May, but not for socialist, Venezuela-lover Corbyn.

The man is a certified socialist nutcase. Consider this 2015 article British MP Jeremy Corbyn Speaks out for Venezuela.

When we celebrate, and it is a cause for celebration, the achievements of Venezuela, in jobs, in housing, in health, in education, but above all its role in the whole world as a completely different place, then we do that because we recognise what they have achieved.

The Choice

Right now it's difficult to assess the odds. Many of those 51 dedicated Brexit MPs might change their minds if it appears they may be voted out of office.

If support for Labour drops, perhaps they take they chances. Perhaps they vote their conscious on Brexit and let the chips fall wherever.

What's Hidden?

Meanwhile, no one has any idea yet what tricks or traps the EU laid in that document.

The more stuff that's found, the less likely May survives.

This material is based upon information that Sitka Pacific Capital Management considers reliable and endeavors to keep current, Sitka Pacific Capital Management does not assure that this material is accurate, current or complete, and it should not be relied upon as such.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD retreats below 1.0700 after US GDP data

EUR/USD retreats below 1.0700 after US GDP data

EUR/USD came under modest bearish pressure and retreated below 1.0700. Although the US data showed that the economy grew at a softer pace than expected in Q1, strong inflation-related details provided a boost to the USD.

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD declines below 1.2500 as USD rebounds

GBP/USD declines below 1.2500 as USD rebounds

GBP/USD declined below 1.2500 and erased the majority of its daily gains with the immediate reaction to the US GDP report. The US economy expanded at a softer pace than expected in Q1 but the price deflator jumped to 3.4% from 1.8%. 

GBP/USD News

Gold drops below $2,320 as US yields shoot higher

Gold drops below $2,320 as US yields shoot higher

Gold lost its traction and turned negative on the day below $2,320 in the American session on Thursday. The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield is up more than 1% on the day above 4.7% after US GDP report, weighing on XAU/USD.

Gold News

XRP extends its decline, crypto experts comment on Ripple stablecoin and benefits for XRP Ledger

XRP extends its decline, crypto experts comment on Ripple stablecoin and benefits for XRP Ledger

Ripple extends decline to $0.52 on Thursday, wipes out weekly gains. Crypto expert asks Ripple CTO how the stablecoin will benefit the XRP Ledger and native token XRP. 

Read more

After the US close, it’s the Tokyo CPI

After the US close, it’s the Tokyo CPI

After the US close, it’s the Tokyo CPI, a reliable indicator of the national number and then the BoJ policy announcement. Tokyo CPI ex food and energy in Japan was a rise to 2.90% in March from 2.50%.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures