Sunday Territorian

A DOG’S BREXFAST

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LONDON: Politician­s have rejected British Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal for a third time, sounding its probable death knell and leaving Britain’s withdrawal from the EU in turmoil on the very day it was supposed to quit the bloc.

The decision to reject a stripped-down version of Mrs May’s divorce deal has left it totally unclear how, when or even whether Britain will leave the EU, and plunges the three-year Brexit crisis to a deeper level of uncertaint­y.

“I fear we are reaching the limits of this process in this House,” Mrs May told parliament after the defeat.

“The implicatio­ns of the House’s decision are grave.”

Within minutes of the vote – which took place as thousands of Brexit supporters protested outside parliament – European Council President Donald Tusk said EU leaders would meet on April 10 to discuss Britain’s departure from the bloc.

A succession of European leaders said there was a very real chance Britain would now leave without a deal, a scenario that businesses fear would cause chaos for the world’s fifth-biggest economy. Mrs May had framed the vote as the last opportunit­y to ensure Britain actually left the EU, making a passionate plea to politician­s to put aside party difference­s and strongly-held beliefs.

But in a special sitting of parliament, they voted 344-286 against the EU Withdrawal Agreement, agreed after two years of tortuous negotiatio­ns.

“The legal default now is that the UK is due to leave the European Union on April 12,” Mrs May said. She cautioned that any further delay to Brexit would probably be a long one beyond the current deadline, and would mean Britain holding elections to the European Parliament.

May had offered o to resign if the deal passed, in a bid to win over Euroscepti­c rebels in her Conservati­ve Party who support a more decisive break with the EU than the divorce her deal offers.

The vote leaves her Brexit strategy in tatters. With no majority in parliament for any Brexit option so far, it is unclear what May will now do. Options include asking the EU for a long delay, parliament forcing an election, or a “no-deal” exit.

However, May’s spokesman said she would continue talks with opponents of the deal and some political correspond­ents said she could bring it back a fourth time, perhaps in a “run-off” against any alternativ­e that parliament itself came up with.

Britain now has under two weeks to convince the 27 members of the EU that it has an alternativ­e path out of the impasse, or see itself cast out of the bloc on April 12 with no deal on post-Brexit ties with its largest trading ally.

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