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These are hard times for the United Kingdom (UK), which includes the British regions of England, Scotland and Wales plus Northern Ireland. New Prime Minister Boris Johnson has thrown caution and responsibility out the window, while grandstanding and calling attention to himself in a nonstop melodrama designed to get the UK out of the European Union, whatever the consequences.

The House of Commons fortunately has put a temporary stop to his antics. He did secure a narrow majority for his patchwork, rush departure agreement with the EU. However, Parliament has also insisted on time to study the new accord, and forced him to request an extension from Brussels beyond the October 31 deadline.

In 2016, a confident Prime Minister David Cameron, fresh from the 2015 general election victory of his Conservative Party, held a referendum.

The election voting had bestowed on the Conservatives a narrow but clear parliamentary majority in the House of Commons. The Liberal Democrats, partners in the coalition government of 2010-2015, were no longer needed and found themselves ruthlessly jettisoned.

The referendum was expected to confirm the nation’s involvement in the generally unloved but economically beneficial European Union. Instead, contrary to what polls predicted, those who voted chose by a narrow margin of 52 to 48 percent to withdraw from the organization.

What followed might be compared to the colorful characters and wild bizarre antics found in the classic “Alice in Wonderland.” In that story, Alice follows a hurrying rabbit down a hole and enters a world of intense surreal conflict and fantasy.

Likewise, the debate over Brexit – the shorthand term for leaving the EU – has been dominated by emotion and strong feelings regarding involvement with the rest of Europe, rather than dispassionate discussion of the hard facts of trade and investment.

After the referendum, Cameron resigned as prime minister and then retired from Parliament. Theresa May emerged in the Conservative Party as his successor. She had favored remaining in the EU, but immediately reversed course to reflect the strong anti-Europe feelings in today’s Conservative Party.

Prime Minister May initiated exceptionally complex withdrawal negotiations with EU officials in Brussels, brought home enormously detailed proposed agreements, and was repeatedly defeated in Parliament by large majorities. Her own party is divided on the matter, and her total inability to manage people or events led to her resignation.

Theresa May steps down this month after a successor is chosen. The eccentric controversial Boris Johnson is the front-runner to replace her.

Northern Ireland is a source of special difficulty in Brexit, potentially explosive in nature. The province has a sizable Protestant majority, at the northern end of Catholic Ireland. Ireland also is strongly committed to the EU, and a neutral nation, while Britain is committed to the NATO alliance.

            After several decades of renewed violence from the radical wing of the IRA (Irish Republican Army), the British government achieved a power-sharing peace agreement. Leaving the EU jeopardizes this fragile stability, and the May government has been careful to pursue “backstop” agreements to keep Northern Ireland in the economy of Ireland.

            Meanwhile, separate local government and European Parliament elections in the UK have brought significant losses to the two main parties, Conservatives and Labour, while smaller parties made impressive gains. These include the Liberal Democrats, the Greens, and the new Brexit Party, established by Nigel Farage only in January this year. Previously, Farage led the UK Independence Party (UKIP), which now is fading.

In 2016, Farage and staff members visited the Republican National Convention in Ohio, where he endorsed Donald Trump. On the same trip, federal officers arrested Farage staff member George Cottrell on numerous charges of money laundering, wire fraud, blackmail and extortion. After a plea deal, Cottrell was released him from U.S. prison in March 2017.

            Given current trends, the Conservatives almost certainly will lose their House of Commons majority and another coalition government is probable.

            In the children’s classic, Alice provides impressive examples of calm pragmatism. The British need those qualities now.

Arthur I. Cyr is Clausen Distinguished Professor at Carthage College and author of “After the Cold War.” Contact acyr@carthage.edu