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“I don’t think we can go on like this forever,” said Michel Barnier, in some room or other in Brussels, as the latest round of Brexit talks proved as pointless as the last. He then listed all the areas in which no progress has been made.
Once upon a time, this sort of scene might have been a cause for concern, even rage. Now it’s almost reassuring.
Utterly futile Brexit negotiations followed by pointed statements from Michel Barnier are a throwback to simpler times. All that was missing from the full nostalgia hit was David Davis chuckling inanely away, talking luminous drivel about the German carmakers.
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That slogan, “Take Back Control”, has been much derided over the years, but it’s really having its moment now. Massive economic damage, we now know, feels so much more liberating when you’ve done it to yourself for absolutely no reason whatsoever.
When you’re free to make a truly spectacular idiot of yourself on the world stage, and no one can come along and stop you, then you know you are truly the master of your soul.
What better way is there to prove your strength to others than needless self-harm? We’re Britain! We won the war, we can get through this! That’s what we used to shout out loud to the world, traditionally through the medium of an angry man in the BBC Question Time audience, before proving ourselves right by setting about our own head with a mallet.
The miseries of coronavirus are hellish by comparison. At this point, we were only meant to be dealing with the Brexit-related damage to our businesses, our schools, our hospitals, our jobs and our children’s life chances that we had chosen of our own free will.
Now there is a deadly virus on the loose throughout the world, and absolutely nowhere more so than here.
The weight of the irony is enough to send anyone over the edge. All of the Take Back Control guys are right there, in 10 Downing Street, and there is no other government, anywhere on Earth, that has shown itself so singularly incapable of taking control of anything.
left Created with Sketch. right Created with Sketch.
1/50 5 June 2020Protesters kneel in Trafalgar Square during a Black Lives Matter demonstration in London, England. The death of an African-American man, George Floyd, while in the custody of Minneapolis police has sparked protests across the United States, as well as demonstrations of solidarity in many countries around the world
Getty Images
2/50 4 June 2020Protestors march from Windsor Castle in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement
Getty
3/50 3 June 2020People wearing face masks hold banners in Hyde Park during a Black Lives Matter protest following the death of George Floyd who died in police custody in Minneapolis
Reuters
4/50 2 June 2020Street artist Nath Murdoch touches up his anti-racism mural in Peterborough, Cambridgeshire
PA
5/50 1 June 2020Customers socially distance themselves as they queue to enter Ikea in Warrington. The store opening saw large queues of people and traffic on adjacent roads as it reopened after the lockdown. The furniture and housewares chain reopened its stores across England and Northern Ireland subject to several restrictions, keeping its restaurants closed and asking customers to shop alone
Getty
6/50 31 May 2020A man wearing a protective face mask kneels in front of police officers during a protest against the death in Minneapolis police custody of African-American man George Floyd near the U.S. Embassy, London, Britai
Reuters
7/50 30 May 2020Visitors at Grassholme Reservoir in Lunedale, Co Durham are able to cross an ancient packhorse bridge as work on the dam wall means water levels have dropped signifcantly to reveal this monument of the pas
UK
8/50 29 May 2020British Tennis player Maia Lumsden in action at Bridge of Allan Tennis Club. People can meet family and friends outdoors and play sports such as golf and tennis again as the country is moving into phase one of the Scottish Government’s plan for gradually lifting lockdown
PA
9/50 28 May 2020A police frogman, searches for a weapon in Abington Lake in in Northampton
Getty
10/50 27 May 2020Prime Minister Boris Johnson appears before the Liaison Committee via Zoom from the cabinet room at 10 Downing Street, amid the coronavirus
10 Downing Street/Reuters
11/50 26 May 2020Members of the public relax on the beach at Botany Bay in Margate
Getty
12/50 25 May 2020Dominic Cummings, senior aide to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, makes a statement inside 10 Downing Street, London, over allegations he breached coronavirus lockdown restrictions
AP
13/50 24 May 2020A demonstrator holds a sign reading ‘Why are you above the law?’ outside the house of Dominic Cummings in London, following allegations Cummings broke coronavirus lockdown rules by travelling across the country
Reuters
14/50 23 May 2020People take a walk near Durdle Door as cows graze in Lulworth
Reuters
15/50 22 May 2020Waves break onto a wall at Brighton beach
Reuters
16/50 21 May 2020Cafe owner Francini Osorio serves customers in a trial phase during the coronavirus lockdown. Osorio has installed an air purifier and 35 clear shower curtains, which will divide customers and tables, in the Francini Cafe De Colombia, Worcester, ready for the re-opening of his business as lockdown restrictions are eased
PA
17/50 20 May 2020People at Bournemouth beach in Dorset, as people flock to parks and beaches with lockdown measures eased. The Met Office has predicted the hottest day of the year
PA
18/50 19 May 2020A dog jumps into the water as families relax at a Lido in London
AP
19/50 18 May 2020A fan celebrates outside Celtic Park after Celtic were crowned champions of the Scottish Premiership. Hearts were also relegated after a decision was made to conclude the season with immediate effect
PA
20/50 17 May 2020People on Brighton beach after the introduction of measures to bring the country out of lockdown
PA
21/50 16 May 2020Police lead away Piers Corbyn, brother of former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, as protesters gather in breach of lockdown rules in Hyde Park in London after the introduction of measures to bring the country out of lockdown.
PA
22/50 15 May 2020Estonian freelance ballet dancer and choreographer, Eve Mutso performs her daily fitness routine near her home in Glasgow, Scotland
Getty
23/50 14 May 2020Senior charge nurse Jan Ferguson views artwork “Theatre of Dott’s” by Kate Ive, inspired by Professor Norman Dott and his neurosurgery theatres at the Western General from 1960-2019. It is one of a number of artworks which sit on the walls of NHS Lothians’ Department of Clinical Neurosciences (DCN) which has been transferred into a purpose-built new home on the Little France campus in Edinburgh
PA
24/50 13 May 2020Team GB’s karate athlete Jordan Thomas trains outside his apartment in Manchester
Reuters
25/50 12 May 2020Nurses from central London hospitals protest on international nurses day about the chronic underfunding of the NHS and other issues surrounding the health service outside the gates of Downing Street, London
PA
26/50 11 May 2020Waves crash at Tynemouth pier on the North East coast
PA
27/50 10 May 2020A woman passes street art and a poster in East London
Reuters
28/50 9 May 2020Police patrol the beach in Brighton
Getty
29/50 8 May 2020The British Royal Air Force Red Arrows conduct a fly past over the statue of former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in London to commemorate the 75th Anniversary of Victory in Europe (VE Day) in Britain
MOD/Reuters
30/50 7 May 2020Team GB sailor Eilidh McIntyre during a training session at her home in Portsmouth
Reuters
31/50 6 May 2020Labour Party leader Keir Starmer listens to Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaking during PMQs
UK Parliament/AFP/Getty
32/50 5 May 2020The sun appears to explode over the horizon in this montage of images captured by photographer Nick Lucas near his home in Ringwood, Hampshire. Nick took a number of pictures just a few seconds apart on a tripod mounted camera which were then combined to give the eye catching dawn image
Nick Lucas/SWNS
33/50 4 May 2020Leeds Green Watch firefighters observe a minute’s silence outside the fire station in Kirkstall Rd, in memory their colleagues that lost their lives in the line of duty
PA
34/50 3 May 2020Staff at The Berkeley hotel give food to ambulance workers
Reuters
35/50 2 May 2020One of a small group of anti-lockdown protesters speaks to a police officer as they gather outside New Scotland Yard in Victoria, London
AFP via Getty
36/50 1 May 2020Bonnie the Llama grazes in a field in the Scottish Borders alongside a sign supporting the NHS as the UK continues in lockdown
PA
37/50 30 April 2020Colonel Tom Moore and his daughter Hannah celebrate his 100th birthday, with an RAF flypast provided by a Spitfire and a Hurricane over his home in Marston Moretaine. Colonel Moore, formerly a Captain, received a promotion in honour of his birthday and in recognition of the funds, in excess of £30m, he raised for the NHS by walking laps of his garden
Capture the Light Photography/Getty
38/50 29 April 2020Britain’s Labour leader Keir Starmer speaks during Prime Minister’s Questions, as members of Parliament observe social distancing due to the coronavirus, in the House of Commons, London, Wednesday, April 29, 2020
UK Parliament/AP
39/50 28 April 2020NHS staff at the Mater hospital in Belfast, during a minute’s silence to pay tribute to the NHS staff and key workers who have died during the coronavirus outbreak
PA
40/50 27 April 2020The sun rises behind redundant oil platforms moored in the Firth of Forth near Kirkcaldy, Fife. Global oil prices have crashed after the coronavirus pandemic reduced demand, with analysts warning that the oil majors may be looking at one of their biggest quarter-on-quarter profitability hits in history.
PA
41/50 26 April 2020Frankie Lynch celebrates on the Mall where the finish of the London Marathon was due to take place today after running 2.6 miles instead of 26 miles to raise money for The Running Charity
Reuters
42/50 25 April 2020A muslim woman walks past balloons outside the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery in London
Reuters
43/50 24 April 2020An empty Brighton Pier, closed during the Coronavirus pandemic as temperatures reach 20 degrees in the South East
Rex
44/50 23 April 2020Farmers work with vehicles to prepare a field next to a field of flowering rapeseed near Pontefract, West Yorkshire
AFP/Getty
45/50 22 April 2020The Northern Lights, the Milky Way and a Lyrid meteor at the Bathing House near Howick, Northumberland, as the Lyrid meteor shower reached its peak
PA
46/50 21 April 2020Badger the Border Collie surrounded by bluebells at Shrawley Wood in Worcestershire
PA
47/50 20 April 2020A dog walker on Blyth beach in Northumberland
PA
48/50 19 April 2020A piece of coronavirus themed street art grafitti in East London
AFP via Getty
49/50 18 April 2020Members of the City Specialist Cleaning team spray disinfectant around posts in the town centre of Eastleigh, Hampshire
PA
50/50 17 April 2020A taped-up bench in the hamlet of Diglea, Greater Manchester
AFP/Getty
1/50 5 June 2020Protesters kneel in Trafalgar Square during a Black Lives Matter demonstration in London, England. The death of an African-American man, George Floyd, while in the custody of Minneapolis police has sparked protests across the United States, as well as demonstrations of solidarity in many countries around the world
Getty Images
2/50 4 June 2020Protestors march from Windsor Castle in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement
Getty
3/50 3 June 2020People wearing face masks hold banners in Hyde Park during a Black Lives Matter protest following the death of George Floyd who died in police custody in Minneapolis
Reuters
4/50 2 June 2020Street artist Nath Murdoch touches up his anti-racism mural in Peterborough, Cambridgeshire
PA
5/50 1 June 2020Customers socially distance themselves as they queue to enter Ikea in Warrington. The store opening saw large queues of people and traffic on adjacent roads as it reopened after the lockdown. The furniture and housewares chain reopened its stores across England and Northern Ireland subject to several restrictions, keeping its restaurants closed and asking customers to shop alone
Getty
6/50 31 May 2020A man wearing a protective face mask kneels in front of police officers during a protest against the death in Minneapolis police custody of African-American man George Floyd near the U.S. Embassy, London, Britai
Reuters
7/50 30 May 2020Visitors at Grassholme Reservoir in Lunedale, Co Durham are able to cross an ancient packhorse bridge as work on the dam wall means water levels have dropped signifcantly to reveal this monument of the pas
UK
8/50 29 May 2020British Tennis player Maia Lumsden in action at Bridge of Allan Tennis Club. People can meet family and friends outdoors and play sports such as golf and tennis again as the country is moving into phase one of the Scottish Government’s plan for gradually lifting lockdown
PA
9/50 28 May 2020A police frogman, searches for a weapon in Abington Lake in in Northampton
Getty
10/50 27 May 2020Prime Minister Boris Johnson appears before the Liaison Committee via Zoom from the cabinet room at 10 Downing Street, amid the coronavirus
10 Downing Street/Reuters
11/50 26 May 2020Members of the public relax on the beach at Botany Bay in Margate
Getty
12/50 25 May 2020Dominic Cummings, senior aide to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, makes a statement inside 10 Downing Street, London, over allegations he breached coronavirus lockdown restrictions
AP
13/50 24 May 2020A demonstrator holds a sign reading ‘Why are you above the law?’ outside the house of Dominic Cummings in London, following allegations Cummings broke coronavirus lockdown rules by travelling across the country
Reuters
14/50 23 May 2020People take a walk near Durdle Door as cows graze in Lulworth
Reuters
15/50 22 May 2020Waves break onto a wall at Brighton beach
Reuters
16/50 21 May 2020Cafe owner Francini Osorio serves customers in a trial phase during the coronavirus lockdown. Osorio has installed an air purifier and 35 clear shower curtains, which will divide customers and tables, in the Francini Cafe De Colombia, Worcester, ready for the re-opening of his business as lockdown restrictions are eased
PA
17/50 20 May 2020People at Bournemouth beach in Dorset, as people flock to parks and beaches with lockdown measures eased. The Met Office has predicted the hottest day of the year
PA
18/50 19 May 2020A dog jumps into the water as families relax at a Lido in London
AP
19/50 18 May 2020A fan celebrates outside Celtic Park after Celtic were crowned champions of the Scottish Premiership. Hearts were also relegated after a decision was made to conclude the season with immediate effect
PA
20/50 17 May 2020People on Brighton beach after the introduction of measures to bring the country out of lockdown
PA
21/50 16 May 2020Police lead away Piers Corbyn, brother of former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, as protesters gather in breach of lockdown rules in Hyde Park in London after the introduction of measures to bring the country out of lockdown.
PA
22/50 15 May 2020Estonian freelance ballet dancer and choreographer, Eve Mutso performs her daily fitness routine near her home in Glasgow, Scotland
Getty
23/50 14 May 2020Senior charge nurse Jan Ferguson views artwork “Theatre of Dott’s” by Kate Ive, inspired by Professor Norman Dott and his neurosurgery theatres at the Western General from 1960-2019. It is one of a number of artworks which sit on the walls of NHS Lothians’ Department of Clinical Neurosciences (DCN) which has been transferred into a purpose-built new home on the Little France campus in Edinburgh
PA
24/50 13 May 2020Team GB’s karate athlete Jordan Thomas trains outside his apartment in Manchester
Reuters
25/50 12 May 2020Nurses from central London hospitals protest on international nurses day about the chronic underfunding of the NHS and other issues surrounding the health service outside the gates of Downing Street, London
PA
26/50 11 May 2020Waves crash at Tynemouth pier on the North East coast
PA
27/50 10 May 2020A woman passes street art and a poster in East London
Reuters
28/50 9 May 2020Police patrol the beach in Brighton
Getty
29/50 8 May 2020The British Royal Air Force Red Arrows conduct a fly past over the statue of former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in London to commemorate the 75th Anniversary of Victory in Europe (VE Day) in Britain
MOD/Reuters
30/50 7 May 2020Team GB sailor Eilidh McIntyre during a training session at her home in Portsmouth
Reuters
31/50 6 May 2020Labour Party leader Keir Starmer listens to Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaking during PMQs
UK Parliament/AFP/Getty
32/50 5 May 2020The sun appears to explode over the horizon in this montage of images captured by photographer Nick Lucas near his home in Ringwood, Hampshire. Nick took a number of pictures just a few seconds apart on a tripod mounted camera which were then combined to give the eye catching dawn image
Nick Lucas/SWNS
33/50 4 May 2020Leeds Green Watch firefighters observe a minute’s silence outside the fire station in Kirkstall Rd, in memory their colleagues that lost their lives in the line of duty
PA
34/50 3 May 2020Staff at The Berkeley hotel give food to ambulance workers
Reuters
35/50 2 May 2020One of a small group of anti-lockdown protesters speaks to a police officer as they gather outside New Scotland Yard in Victoria, London
AFP via Getty
36/50 1 May 2020Bonnie the Llama grazes in a field in the Scottish Borders alongside a sign supporting the NHS as the UK continues in lockdown
PA
37/50 30 April 2020Colonel Tom Moore and his daughter Hannah celebrate his 100th birthday, with an RAF flypast provided by a Spitfire and a Hurricane over his home in Marston Moretaine. Colonel Moore, formerly a Captain, received a promotion in honour of his birthday and in recognition of the funds, in excess of £30m, he raised for the NHS by walking laps of his garden
Capture the Light Photography/Getty
38/50 29 April 2020Britain’s Labour leader Keir Starmer speaks during Prime Minister’s Questions, as members of Parliament observe social distancing due to the coronavirus, in the House of Commons, London, Wednesday, April 29, 2020
UK Parliament/AP
39/50 28 April 2020NHS staff at the Mater hospital in Belfast, during a minute’s silence to pay tribute to the NHS staff and key workers who have died during the coronavirus outbreak
PA
40/50 27 April 2020The sun rises behind redundant oil platforms moored in the Firth of Forth near Kirkcaldy, Fife. Global oil prices have crashed after the coronavirus pandemic reduced demand, with analysts warning that the oil majors may be looking at one of their biggest quarter-on-quarter profitability hits in history.
PA
41/50 26 April 2020Frankie Lynch celebrates on the Mall where the finish of the London Marathon was due to take place today after running 2.6 miles instead of 26 miles to raise money for The Running Charity
Reuters
42/50 25 April 2020A muslim woman walks past balloons outside the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery in London
Reuters
43/50 24 April 2020An empty Brighton Pier, closed during the Coronavirus pandemic as temperatures reach 20 degrees in the South East
Rex
44/50 23 April 2020Farmers work with vehicles to prepare a field next to a field of flowering rapeseed near Pontefract, West Yorkshire
AFP/Getty
45/50 22 April 2020The Northern Lights, the Milky Way and a Lyrid meteor at the Bathing House near Howick, Northumberland, as the Lyrid meteor shower reached its peak
PA
46/50 21 April 2020Badger the Border Collie surrounded by bluebells at Shrawley Wood in Worcestershire
PA
47/50 20 April 2020A dog walker on Blyth beach in Northumberland
PA
48/50 19 April 2020A piece of coronavirus themed street art grafitti in East London
AFP via Getty
49/50 18 April 2020Members of the City Specialist Cleaning team spray disinfectant around posts in the town centre of Eastleigh, Hampshire
PA
50/50 17 April 2020A taped-up bench in the hamlet of Diglea, Greater Manchester
AFP/Getty
So hopeless has it all been that it has made it on to the novelty birthday cards. As the kind of person whose nose is pressed far too close against the glass of politics, I have long considered the novelty birthday card market as the key barometer of political doom.
If you attend every speech, every press conference, every hustings, you are used to hearing politicians saying the same thing over and over again. So it’s only when you see, for example, Theresa May’s face in the window of your local Scribbler next to the words “Have a Strong and Stable Birthday” that you know something’s definitely up.
The Boris Johnson coronavirus novelty cards now appear to be doing a brisk trade. “Go out. No stay in. You can have a barbecue, no you can’t have a barbecue.” You can now use these words to wish someone a happy birthday. One suspects such a birthday item is not widely for sale in Germany, even though people there can mainly be confident they’ll be celebrating again next year.
A deadly virus, for which you are completely unprepared and your government is utterly incapable of doing even the bare minimum to deal with, is enough to unsettle anyone.
That we are, as things stand, on course for the most damaging form of Brexit available is a reality about which people have almost stopped caring. After the pain of coronavirus has passed through the economy, even the most damaging of all Brexits will be like the placenta after childbirth.
How the nation will feel about a no-deal Brexit, or at best, the most bare bones Brexit possible, come December, is impossible to know.
In so many ways, Brexit has shaped the nation’s opinion on coronavirus. That positions are still so deeply entrenched has almost certainly meant that large numbers of people are happy to overlook the truly and uniquely disastrous handling of what has happened in this country.
Of course, the same truth runs in both directions, but it must surely be to a lesser extent. I hope I can say with sincerity that I did not want the government to fail as badly as it has done, for as many lives to be needlessly lost.
I did not expect Cummings and co to be found so hopelessly wanting, and for the clear evidence of their hopelessness to be so overwhelming.
It reveals a tragic truth about Brexit, too.
They were always hopelessly out of their depth on that, and in a way they’re lucky. Now is the time they would have been clearly seen accidentally drowning themselves after getting into difficulty in the children’s play pool. Instead, a tsunami has appeared on the horizon.
Source: UK Politics - www.independent.co.uk