The Province

U.K. gov’t wins Brexit skirmish by making deals

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LONDON — The British government was rocked by a resignatio­n and faced anger in Parliament over its Brexit plans Tuesday, but staved off defeat by offering concession­s to lawmakers who want to soften the terms of the U.K.’s exit from the European Union.

By a vote of 324 to 298, the House of Commons rejected a move to give lawmakers power to send the government back to the negotiatin­g table if they don’t like the terms of the Brexit deal struck with the EU.

The result left Prime Minister Theresa May to fight another day as she tries to take Britain out of the bloc while retaining support from pro-EU and pro-Brexit wings of her Conservati­ve Party.

But it came at a cost — a government promise to strengthen Parliament’s voice, potentiall­y at the expense of its own power to set the terms of any final divorce deal with the EU.

The vote came on the first of two days of high-stakes debate and votes in the House of Commons on the government’s Brexit bill.

The European Union Withdrawal Bill, a complex piece of legislatio­n intended to disentangl­e Britain from four decades of EU rules, has had a rocky ride through Parliament. The upper chamber, the House of Lords, inserted amendments in 15 areas to soften the departure.

The pro-EU faction got a boost when junior justice minister Phillip Lee resigned Tuesday, saying he could no longer support the government’s “irresponsi­ble” plans for Brexit.

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MAY Leading Brexit

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