The EU should let Johnson-Cummings’ Brexit psychodrama unfold



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Anyone surprised by the latest turn of events in Brexit in Britain has not been paying attention. Modeled in part on the Bannon-Trump experiment in the US, the Cummings-Johnson administration came to power on the basis of a single theme: leaving the EU, and a willingness to circumvent convention, tell lies, breaking laws, tearing down institutions and upsetting neighbors.

There has been a significant electorate in the UK for the toughest exits from the EU for years. Initially it was just Nigel Farage and his acolytes. Today it is the conservative party, purged of centrists, of those who are sulking and of anyone who has less than absolute loyalty to the leader.

There are unanswered questions about the decision to violate international law, to tear apart a Withdrawal Agreement whose ink has barely had time to dry. Because right now? What are the tactics, the objectives, that led Boris Johnson to repudiate the deal he negotiated and signed?

Johnson wrote on Saturday that it was a necessary step to preserve the integrity of the UK, allegedly from a future attack by the EU. This is a language that is normally heard from Western leaders when speaking of countries like Russia or North Korea. That Britain is now referring to the EU – “our friends,” Johnson once said in an earlier version of himself – in terms of outright aggression speaks volumes.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his political adviser Dominic Cummings.  Photograph: Peter Summers / Getty Images

Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his political adviser Dominic Cummings. Photograph: Peter Summers / Getty Images

So what are they doing? We know Dominic Cummings’ appetite for “breaking things,” a pseudo-anarchist philosophy often found in playgrounds and student unions. Commentators baffle Johnson, the mayor of London, and Johnson, the prime minister. The first showed liberalism, cosmopolitanism and a carefree attitude halfway through, albeit with the occasional expensive trick. Johnson seemed the antithesis of the ideologue: he rarely showed much faith in anything other than himself. The exhausted-looking demagogue on display in Downing Street could not bear a greater contrast.

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