• Donate
  • Login
Friday, June 5, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
Canary
Cart / £0.00

No products in the basket.

MEDIA THAT DISRUPTS
  • UK
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Skwawkbox
  • Manage Subscription
  • Support
  • Features
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Science
    • Feature
    • Sport & Gaming
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Business
    • Money
    • Travel
    • Property
    • Food
    • Media
  • SHOP
No Result
View All Result
MANAGE SUBSCRIPTION
SUPPORT
  • UK
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Skwawkbox
  • Manage Subscription
  • Support
  • Features
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Science
    • Feature
    • Sport & Gaming
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Business
    • Money
    • Travel
    • Property
    • Food
    • Media
  • SHOP
No Result
View All Result
Canary
No Result
View All Result
  • Editorial
  • Explainer
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Environment
  • Feature
  • Food
  • Health
  • Science
  • Skwawkbox
  • UK

Corbyn nails it. Theresa May offering to resign for her deal shows Brexit was always about the Tory party.

Joshua Funnell by Joshua Funnell
28 March 2019
in Editorial, UK
Reading Time: 5 mins read
168 5
A A
1
Home Editorial
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on BlueskyShare via WhatsAppShare via TelegramShare on Threads

Theresa May’s offer to resign in exchange for the votes of her party’s extreme “Brexit fanatics” is the final degrading act in what history will judge an abysmal spell as prime minister.

And as Jeremy Corbyn has pointed out, this pathetically weak gesture shows what Brexit was about all along: the Conservative Party.

“Right for our country and our party”

May has reached the absolute pits. She fails to command the support of her DUP allies, or her own MPs.

The BBC reported that May told Conservative MPs on 27 March:

I am prepared to leave this job earlier than I intended in order to do what is right for our country and our party.

Note how she claims to be acting in the interest of country first and party second. It’s a point Conservative loyalists were quick to echo on social media:

Tonight @theresa_may has put her country first. I hope my @Conservatives MP colleagues can find it in themselves to do the same. and #backthedeal 🇬🇧

— Nigel Adams (@nadams) March 27, 2019

Other Conservative politicians gave first-hand accounts of her emotional climb down that require sick bags to listen to:

Theresa May had "tears not far from her eyes" as she told her MPs she would quit if they accept her #Brexit deal, says Conservative MP George Freemanhttps://t.co/0zbJ8cXo7G pic.twitter.com/kBOJVvgkDa

— BBC Politics (@BBCPolitics) March 27, 2019

But others were quick to call bullshit on the idea of May as a selfless national servant sacrificing herself for ‘the good of the realm’.

Corbyn: it’s “about party management, not principles or the public interest”

Corbyn was quick to call out May’s actions for what they really were, party self-interest:

Theresa May’s pledge to Tory MPs to stand down if they vote for her deal shows once and for all that her chaotic Brexit negotiations have been about party management, not principles or the public interest.

A change of government can't be a Tory stitch-up, the people must decide.

— Jeremy Corbyn (@jeremycorbyn) March 27, 2019

And Tom Kibasi, director of the Institute for Public Policy Research, also told it like it is:

Conservative MPs who back a dreadful #Brexit deal for our country because Theresa May will resign as Prime Minister have revealed their priorities: Party over country. A disgrace.

— Tom Kibasi (@TomKibasi) March 27, 2019

Others on social media highlighted the hypocrisy of arch-Brexiteers such like Boris Johnson, suddenly deciding to support May’s Brexit deal:

Johnson: This deal is morally unacceptable. Vassalage. Servitude. A turd. Betrayal.

May: Accept the deal and I’ll resign and you might get the Big Job.

Johnson: I will vote for the deal. Let us praise the PM for her dignity and sacrifice.

U.K. politics in a nutshell

— Matt Carr (@MattCarr55) March 27, 2019

And writer Will Hutton expressed his view on the prospect of ‘prime minister Boris Johnson’:

Boris Johnson is contemptible- grinning from ear to ear after the 1922 Committee tonight, contemplating his manoeuvres may have landed him the Prime Ministership. He is a charlatan and a shit, not competent to run a whelk stall . He will split country and party.

— Will Hutton (@williamnhutton) March 27, 2019

May’s shocking Brexit record

Considering May’s historic Brexit record, her proposal to hand over power to another Tory becomes outrageous.

She is effectively saying: ‘Please vote for this crappy deal you hate. And in exchange, I’ll give you a shot at the keys for No 10. You can then implement your fantasy of an extremely deregulated British state, tax breaks for the rich and decimated workers rights.’

But let’s remember some important facts about May’s time as the Brexit PM.

Firstly, Theresa May’s hard vision of Brexit was given no majority by the British public at the 2017 general election. Her vision, or so-called ‘red lines’, included among other things:

  • No customs union with the EU.
  • No EU single market relationship.
  • Complete severance from EU institutions.

Yet despite losing her majority, May continued to act as Britain’s one true ruler. She was belligerent and Thatcheresque, a Queen Elizabeth the First 2.0.

Secondly, to help uphold her delusion of strong executive government, she handed the DUP a bung to get a working majority. People were outraged for about a week. But then the media forgot all about it and just acted like it was part of a merry political game. And so May continued to act like a Brexit dictator, refusing to compromise on her deal with other parties.

Thirdly, her EU negotiations, which appeared to have no direction for months, were a shambles. Later her government was held in contempt of parliament (the first ever) for refusing to publish legal advice given on her Brexit deal. The deal itself then lost by the biggest margin in history. Then it lost again. She tried to keep bringing the deal back over and over again, against the will of parliament. She apparently believed she could run down the clock, scare the shit out of MPs fearing a no-deal Brexit and bulldozer it through anyway. Until, that is, the speaker humiliated her, called it unacceptable, and refused to accept it again in the same form.

We could go on. And yet despite all of the above, like a crawling Zombie torso mindlessly clinging on to existence, May hung on to power. She refused to resign again and again, or to call a general election. This was despite votes of no-confidence in her government and in her as her own party’s leader.

Tories’ entitlement to power

Despite this shocking record of personal failure, May thinks she can now bribe her own party. She’s effectively promising to hand over power to a new Conservative prime minister-in-waiting. A prime minister nobody in the UK will have voted to hold that role. And likely somebody holding an extreme right-wing, deregulated vision of Brexit Britain’s economy. Nobody in all seriousness can claim 17.4 million people voted for that.

She’s throwing the UK under a bus to please her own party, despite all the chaos and anxiety she’s caused citizens. And apparently, she’s doing all this to scrape a legacy for herself to satisfy her own vanity.

The lack of humility and sense of entitlement Conservatives – and May in particular – display is genuinely breathtaking.

The Conservative Party needs to own the Brexit catastrophe and drown it

But the Conservative Party using Brexit to help itself is the norm.

After all, the Brexit referendum was called by Conservative prime minister David Cameron to please his own party. The president of the EU Council, Donald Tusk, even claimed Cameron admitted this to him in private. This is also the opinion of former Conservative chair Sayeeda Warsi.

Brexit is, and always has been, a self-indulgent Tory psychodrama. It’s the masochism of an entitled club of privileged spivs gambling away the country’s future in an inconsequential public-school debating society. And it’s the sad fantasy of a group of middle-aged men living out their childhood dreams of doing battle with foreigners.

And so May’s self-sacrifice is nothing of the sort. It is another unearned reward for a Conservative Party that deserves putting in the ground over Brexit.

As Corbyn said: “A change of government can’t be a Tory stitch-up, the people must decide”. Call an election, now!

Featured image via YouTube – BBC News / YouTube – CBC NEWS / YouTube – The Guardian.

Tags: BrexitConservative PartyJeremy CorbynLabour Party
Share128Tweet80ShareSendShareShare
Previous Post

Book industry ‘drawing up plans’ to pulp May’s memoirs

Next Post

The centrists just proved once and for all they will attack Corbyn whatever he does on Brexit

Next Post
Jeremy Corbyn alongside Chris Leslie MP

The centrists just proved once and for all they will attack Corbyn whatever he does on Brexit

Theresa May and Jeremy Corbyn

Screw the epic Brexit distraction. We need a general election to fix Britain's real problems.

Chuka Umunna and Melanie Onn

A Labour MP tells Chuka Umunna off for thinking he's 'something a bit special', live on the BBC

Protest 27 March

Living through blackouts: Venezuelan government accuses opposition of 'sabotage'

Water cannon and Gerard Batten

Brexit protests off to a bad start following UKIP leader's ludicrous claim about police tactics

Comments 1

  1. JC4PM says:
    7 years ago

    It’s always been about the Tories. Right from Cameron calling an election to appease the Tory right. A pity that he made Ratner’s classic mistake of trashing the brand you want them to buy. The electorate believed the Tory propaganda of the EU and immigrants being the reason for Tory neglect and destruction and voted accordingly DOH!!

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Robinson on fire for England against New Zealand at Lord's
Analysis

Ollie Robinson’s roar at Lord’s

by Faz Ali
5 June 2026
Palestine solidarity murals, Belfast — planned march
Analysis

Epic pro-Palestine march will take place despite blocking attempts

by Robert Freeman
5 June 2026
BBC media conference, Basra International Airport 2009
Analysis

Legacy media platforms ex-military figures without disclosing war industry links

by Joe Glenton
5 June 2026
Sánchez
Skwawkbox

Sánchez must act against Spanish police after brutal attack on pensioner protester

by Skwawkbox
4 June 2026
Composite image showing Andy Burnham, Count Binface and Rob Kenyon in front of a street scene in Makerfield
Opinion

Count Binface Makerfield manifesto would stitch up Burnham

by John Ranson
4 June 2026

The Canary
PO Box 71199
LONDON
SE20 9EX

Canary Media Ltd – registered in England. Company registration number 09788095.

For guest posting, contact [email protected]

For other enquiries, contact: [email protected]

Complaints and Corrections

About the Canary

Meet the Team

© Canary Media Ltd 2026, all rights reserved | Website by Monster | Hosted by Krystal | Privacy Settings

Ok

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
  • UK
  • Global
  • Opinion
  • Skwawkbox
  • Manage Subscription
  • Support
  • Features
    • Health
    • Environment
    • Science
    • Feature
    • Sport & Gaming
    • Lifestyle
    • Tech
    • Business
    • Money
    • Travel
    • Property
    • Food
    • Media
  • SHOP
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Cart