Rory Stewart may be the leader we need in the uncompromising Brexit War "by all means necessary"



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If for nothing else, credit to Boris Johnson for that. Three days after taking power, he did what Theresa May could not do in three years and brought absolute clarity to this point.

Ladies and gentlemen, we are at war. It will be as short and brutal as its consequences will be endless and atrocious, and will end in two ways: we will leave the EU without any agreement, or not at all.

The big question today is not about Johnson's intention. Palpably, he does not bluff. He knows that the EU27 will not back down on Irish support. He also knows that he can not pbad any agreement in the House of Commons.


We will tell you what is true. You can form your own view.

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With a by-election Thursday and another Conservative MP who would be on the verge of being charged with various badual offenses, he is potentially in a few days without a majority (even baduming the DUP to keep him).

These two knowledge are added to a deduction. If he manages to avoid dangerous legislative elections for which he is blatantly preparing, he intends to incite the EU to do his dirty work for him. He wants to make it the scapegoat of the horrors that await us by throwing us out at Halloween.

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1/40 In: Esther McVey

Esther McVey appointed Housing Secretary

AFP / Getty Images

2/40 In: Jo Johnson

Jo Johnson appointed secretary of business and energy

EPA

3/40 In: Brandon Lewis

Brandon Lewis appointed secretary of immigration

Getty Images

4/40 In: James artfully

James Cleverly Named Conservative Party President

Pennsylvania

5/40 In: Jacob Rees-Mogg

Jacob Rees Mogg appointed leader of the communes

AFP / Getty Images

6/40 In: Baroness Evans

Baroness Evans remains chief of lords

Pennsylvania

7/40 In: Julian Smith

Julian Smith appointed secretary of Northern Ireland

REUTERS

8/40 In: Alister Jack

Alister Jack named Scottish Secretary

Pennsylvania

9/40 In: Alun Cairns

Alun Cairns remains Welsh secretary

AFP / Getty Images

10/40 In: Grant Shapps

Grant Shapps appointed Secretary of Transportation

Getty Images

11/40 In: Alok Sharma

Alok Sharma named Secretary for International Development

AFP / Getty Images

12/40 In: Robert Buckland

Robert Buckland appointed secretary of justice

Getty Images

13/40 In: Amber Rudd

Amber Rudd remains secretary of labor and pensions

Getty Images

14/40 In: Robert Jenrick

Robert Jenrick appointed Housing and Community Secretary

AFP / Getty Images

15/40 In: Andrea Leadsom

Andrea Leadsom appointed secretary of business

REUTERS

16/40 In: Nicky Morgan

Nicky Morgan appointed secretary of culture

Getty Images

17/40 In: Gavin Williamson

Gavin Williamson appointed secretary of education

AFP / Getty

18/40 In: Theresa Villiers

Theresa Villiers appointed secretary of the environment

AFP / Getty Images

19/40 In: Liz Truss

Liz Truss Appointed Secretary of International Trade

REUTERS

20/40 In: Ben Wallace

Ben Wallace appointed secretary of defense

EPA

21/40 In: Stephen Barclay

Stephen Barclay remains secretary of the EU

AFP / Getty Images

22/40 In: Dominic Raab

Dominic Raab appointed Secretary of Foreign Affairs

AFP / Getty Images

23/40 In: Priti Patel

Priti Patel appointed house secretary

AFP / Getty Images

24/40 In: Michael Gove

Michael Gove received Chandellor from the Duchy of Lancaster

AFP / Getty Images

25/40 In: Sajid Javid

Sajid Javid is appointed Chancellor of the Chessboard

AP

26/40 Out: Jeremy Hunt

Jeremy Hunt dismissed as Foreign Secretary

REUTERS

27/40 In: Matt Hanbad

Matt Hanbad remains secretary of health

AFP / Getty Images

28/40 Out: Chris Grayling

Chris Grayling resigned as Secretary of Transportation

Getty Images

29/40 Out: Jeremy Wright

Jeremy Wright dismissed from his post of secretary of culture

Pennsylvania

30/40 Out: Karen Bradley

Karen Bradley sacked as secretary of Northern Ireland

Getty Images

31/40 Out: James Brokenshire

James Brokenshire licensed as Housing and Community Secretary

REUTERS

32/40 Out: Penny Mordaunt

Penny Mourdaunt dismissed from her duties as Secretary of Defense

REUTERS

33/40 Out: Liam Fox

Liam Fox sacked as Secretary of International Trade

Getty Images

34/40 Out: Greg Clarke

Greg Clarke sacked as Business Secretary

Pennsylvania

35/40 Out: David Mundell

David Mundell sacked as Scottish secretary

Getty Images

36/40 Out: Damien Hinds

Damien Hinds sacked from his duties as secretary of education

Getty Images

37/40 Out: David Gauke

David Gauke resigned as secretary of justice

EPA

38/40 Out: Rory Stewart

Rory Stewart resigned as Secretary of International Development

Getty

39/40 Out: David Lidlington

David Lidlington resigned as deputy prime minister

Pennsylvania

40/40 Out: Philip Hammond

Philip Hammond resigned as Chancellor of the Exchequer

AFP / Getty Images


1/40 In: Esther McVey

Esther McVey appointed Housing Secretary

AFP / Getty Images

2/40 In: Jo Johnson

Jo Johnson appointed secretary of business and energy

EPA

3/40 In: Brandon Lewis

Brandon Lewis appointed secretary of immigration

Getty Images

4/40 In: James artfully

James Cleverly Named Conservative Party President

Pennsylvania

5/40 In: Jacob Rees-Mogg

Jacob Rees Mogg appointed leader of the communes

AFP / Getty Images

6/40 In: Baroness Evans

Baroness Evans remains chief of lords

Pennsylvania

7/40 In: Julian Smith

Julian Smith appointed secretary of Northern Ireland

REUTERS

8/40 In: Alister Jack

Alister Jack named Scottish Secretary

Pennsylvania

9/40 In: Alun Cairns

Alun Cairns remains Welsh secretary

AFP / Getty Images

10/40 In: Grant Shapps

Grant Shapps appointed Secretary of Transportation

Getty Images

11/40 In: Alok Sharma

Alok Sharma named Secretary for International Development

AFP / Getty Images

12/40 In: Robert Buckland

Robert Buckland appointed secretary of justice

Getty Images

13/40 In: Amber Rudd

Amber Rudd remains secretary of labor and pensions

Getty Images

14/40 In: Robert Jenrick

Robert Jenrick appointed Housing and Community Secretary

AFP / Getty Images

15/40 In: Andrea Leadsom

Andrea Leadsom appointed secretary of business

REUTERS

16/40 In: Nicky Morgan

Nicky Morgan appointed secretary of culture

Getty Images

17/40 In: Gavin Williamson

Gavin Williamson appointed secretary of education

AFP / Getty

18/40 In: Theresa Villiers

Theresa Villiers appointed secretary of the environment

AFP / Getty Images

19/40 In: Liz Truss

Liz Truss Appointed Secretary of International Trade

REUTERS

20/40 In: Ben Wallace

Ben Wallace appointed secretary of defense

EPA

21/40 In: Stephen Barclay

Stephen Barclay remains secretary of the EU

AFP / Getty Images

22/40 In: Dominic Raab

Dominic Raab appointed Secretary of Foreign Affairs

AFP / Getty Images

23/40 In: Priti Patel

Priti Patel appointed house secretary

AFP / Getty Images

24/40 In: Michael Gove

Michael Gove received Chandellor from the Duchy of Lancaster

AFP / Getty Images

25/40 In: Sajid Javid

Sajid Javid is appointed Chancellor of the Chessboard

AP

26/40 Out: Jeremy Hunt

Jeremy Hunt dismissed as Foreign Secretary

REUTERS

27/40 In: Matt Hanbad

Matt Hanbad remains secretary of health

AFP / Getty Images

28/40 Out: Chris Grayling

Chris Grayling resigned as Secretary of Transportation

Getty Images

29/40 Out: Jeremy Wright

Jeremy Wright dismissed from his post of secretary of culture

Pennsylvania

30/40 Out: Karen Bradley

Karen Bradley sacked as secretary of Northern Ireland

Getty Images

31/40 Out: James Brokenshire

James Brokenshire licensed as Housing and Community Secretary

REUTERS

32/40 Out: Penny Mordaunt

Penny Mourdaunt dismissed from her duties as Secretary of Defense

REUTERS

33/40 Out: Liam Fox

Liam Fox sacked as Secretary of International Trade

Getty Images

34/40 Out: Greg Clarke

Greg Clarke sacked as Business Secretary

Pennsylvania

35/40 Out: David Mundell

David Mundell sacked as Scottish secretary

Getty Images

36/40 Out: Damien Hinds

Damien Hinds sacked from his duties as secretary of education

Getty Images

37/40 Out: David Gauke

David Gauke resigned as secretary of justice

EPA

38/40 Out: Rory Stewart

Rory Stewart resigned as Secretary of International Development

Getty

39/40 Out: David Lidlington

David Lidlington resigned as deputy prime minister

Pennsylvania

40/40 Out: Philip Hammond

Philip Hammond resigned as Chancellor of the Exchequer

AFP / Getty Images

Here is the big question of the day. Who will take a step forward to lead the resistance and fight it by all means necessary?

If no one does, and the enemies of non-agreement remain as diffuse and chaotic as they are, I think we got it.

He does not know if he can avoid the elections that would follow the defeat of a censorship vote. Otherwise, at that time, smart money would go to Johnson to win it. It has its ballot and a simplistic message so directly raised by the Brexit party that Nigel Farage would be well advised to accept any offer from the ambbadador.

Jeremy Corbyn has no coherent message or discernable clue to counter it. The Johnson who got him out of the House on Thursday was not the shambolic buffoon he had planned.

Corbyn finds himself confronted by an extremely concentrated and alarming nihilist-narcissist narcissist with an empty promise of redemption and a burden of cheap opium for the mbades.

In a middleweight contest, a strident demagogue will usually have the beat of a confused head duffer who, even now, seems pathologically unable to comprehend the depths of his own mind.

In the board game of utopian politics, Corbyn would do the decent thing. He would nobly accept that he is the wrong guy to fight the dead end about which he is slightly more ambivalent than the majority of those who elected him and reelected him.

He would go with honor, after saving his party from its putrid decline in neo-Thatcher's economy and in a patronizing disregard for its natural supporters.

But in this dystopian nightmare, with no mechanism to eliminate it, he seems determined to stay.

If the leader of the opposition deliberately refuses to lead the opposition, who will fill the void?

Keir Starmer has talent and gravity. But his ruthless patience with Corbyn's procrastination (he makes his work look like Basil Fawlty during an atrocious eruption of stakes) finds him in behind-the-scenes bargaining with companions of other parties rather than conducting a rebellion within his own party.

Naturally, after less than a week at the helm of Liberal Democrats, Jo Swinson remains an unknown and 90% of the electorate simply a stranger. It inherits both a revivified party by Corbyn's insulting equivocation and the clbadic challenge of thirds to be heard over the din. You would like to say that time will tell if she has the skills and charisma to lead more than her own group of MPs. But the time is almost up.

So, Rory Stewart, an isolated nation – or about half of a nation – is watching you. As Philip Hammond seems to agree, the former soldier / adventurer / royal preceptor with the appearance of a teddy bear ravaged by the disease is what comes closest to the alliance of rebels with a charismatic deputy.

It is true that the end of Stewart's campaign to succeed May left something to be desired. Desperate privately the idiocy and quackery of his colleagues is fine. Rolling the eyes and unraveling the disgusted tie during a televised debate suggests the kind of intellectual superiority complex, however well-founded, that voters tend not to embrace.


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But this is not the time to abandon the promising in the quest for the perfect. Of all the potential opposition leaders in sight, Stewart's charm, brains, honesty, and all-party calling make him the most adept at leading the anti-no campaign under the hurried construction of Hammond and his allies.

However, regardless of the effectiveness of such a campaign, it is at the mercy of a general election that will constitute a second proxy referendum. As things stand, the arguments of the argument are as homogeneous as in 2016. The advantage 52-48 of Rest, deliciously symmetrical in the last survey, was well within the margin of error.

But one side has an incredibly ruthless new leader, a coordinated organization and a clear plan of action. The other is rudderless, diffuse and disorganized. In one way or another, over the next few weeks, someone must emerge as his public voice and find the words to create a united and monolithic resistance that transcends party lines.

It's the war to the death. The others have their ersatz Churchill. Hoping that Stewart did it for us.

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