May's offer was neither 'new' nor bold. It will be her final failure

In a last-ditch attempt to get her deal through
parliament, Theresa May has presented a supposedly fresh 10-point plan to break
the deadlock. On closer examination, the changes are at best slight, and at
worst set to lose her more support than they gain.
May once attempted a similar manoeuvre over
supposedly “legally binding changes to the backstop”. This afternoon was a last
hurrah that is set to fail precisely because what she has offered is
substantially no different to her three previous attempts to get a withdrawal
bill passed. Nothing has changed.
The most eye-catching announcement was that MPs
would be offered a parliamentary vote on a second referendum if they supported
the bill at its second reading.
But most pro-referendum MPs have concluded that the
best chance of getting a majority for a second national vote would be in
October, in the face of a fresh Tory leader genuinely willing to crash out of
the EU with no deal. They know that without brinkmanship, the numbers simply
aren’t there. So May’s offer won’t wash.
In another faux-concession, the prime minister has
offered a vote on customs between a “facilitated customs arrangement” and a
temporary customs union, lasting until the next general election.
But the
former has already been rejected by the EU as unworkable (it has never been
attempted anywhere in the world) and the latter is essentially what is already
in the standstill transition in the withdrawal agreement.
So in fact, this is no concession at all, and one of
the main reasons that talks with the Labour party broke up without agreement.
May has also attempted to placate Brexiters in her
own party by offering new assurances on the backstop. The problem is that her
proposal is likely to make the situation worse from the perspective of the
Eurosceptic ERG, not better.
In the absence of any known solutions to the Irish
border problem, the backstop isn’t a fallback but rather the default, so the
new commitment to present alternative arrangements by 2020 is virtually
meaningless.
The agreement might as well require the UK
government to present the European commission with a jar of magic beans or
arrive at the next summit on a flying carpet. May’s fresh commitment to avoid
divergence between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK when the backstop is
activated means that the whole of the UK would be a rule-taker from Brussels
through Belfast.
Finally, the new commitment on workers’ rights and
environmental protections represents vanishingly little movement from the
government. While workers’ rights are promised to remain the same as those in
the EU, environmental protections are essentially the same as in the withdrawal
agreement, with a commitment not to slide back.
It seems highly unlikely that these changes will
satisfy either trade unions or environmental groups, further reducing the
likelihood that opposition MPs will back the bill.
These latest parliamentary manoeuvres do not change
the parliamentary arithmetic. For every vote that the prime minister picks up
from Labour MPs from leave constituencies, she will lose at least the same
number from her own side of the house. Even her own cabinet are not prepared to
support this new endeavour.
With Tory MPs
anticipating their future leader to be committed to a no-deal exit in October,
they have little incentive to change their position. It seems quite likely that
the margin of defeat will be greater than the last attempt.
Given the
lack of substantive changes and the low likelihood of successful passage of the
bill, there is little reason for opposition MPs to back an outgoing prime
minister when they will face extraordinary opprobrium from their own party
members and supporters for doing so. Most parliamentarians on all sides will be
thinking a simple thought: please stop, now.