The latest change in plan

May’s latest screeching U-turn makes her utterly unfit to lead

Jonathan Freedland

Wed 20 Mar 2019 16.20 GMTLast modified on Wed 20 Mar 2019 19.17 GMT

Theresa May upside down poster

This latest example is the Russian doll of reversals, with several other reversals contained within it.’ Photograph: Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters

No matter how bad you think Theresa May is, she always manages to get worse. Her record of insisting on one thing, only to U-turn weeks, days or even hours later is almost impressive in its scope. There would be no snap election, she vowed – and then there was one. Her Brexit deal would be subject to a meaningful vote in December– and then the vote was pulled, punted into the new year. Brexit would happen on 29 March – and now it won’t.

This latest example is the Russian doll of reversals, with several other reversals contained within it. For just last week, May’s de facto deputy, David Lidington, was adamant that any delay to Brexit would have to be lengthy, since a short, one-off extension would be both pointless – leaving too little time to do anything – and “downright reckless”, as well as being “completely at odds with the position” MPs had taken the previous evening. May had told the Commons that, if MPs voted down her agreement with the EU – which they did – she would be seeking a long extension. She delivered the same message to the cabinet only yesterday.