Hindustan Times (Delhi)

May visits EU in bid to save Brexit before vote

CRUNCH TALKS UK PM to come to House again with a deal before January 21

- Prasun Sonwalkar prasun.sonwalkar@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON: Having made a U-turn on Monday by deferring the crucial vote on the Brexit agreement in the House of Commons, Prime Minister Theresa May dashed to Brussels to meet EU leaders to save the deal, but promised a new vote before January 21.

May faced another mauling in the British press on Tuesday, after MPS condemned her decision to defer the vote on Monday. Westminste­r was seething with speculatio­n that it is a matter of weeks, if not days, before she would be removed.

Some of the headlines are: ‘May’s last roll of the dice’, ‘Desperate May reveals her plan B: to buy more time’ and ‘May pleads for help from Europe’.

As May met German chancellor Angela Merkel and other EU leaders to seek changes in the agreement, particular­ly on the issue of the so-called Northern Ireland ‘backstop’, a Downing Street spokesman said she will come to parliament again with the deal before January 21.

The spokesman said: “We will be keeping with the spirit of the (EU withdrawal) act, and by doing so the government will ensure that the withdrawal agreement is brought back to the house before 21 January.”

Not ruling out a vote before the Christmas break, he added: “We want to ensure we work as quickly as possible to resolve this. Clearly what we will be guided by is getting the reassuranc­es that the house needs.”

On May’s meetings in Brussels, he said: “While the leaders agreed that the backstop was only ever intended to be temporary, the prime minister set out the concerns held by many about it in the UK. She discussed the need for additional reassuranc­es on this point, in order for the deal with the EU to pass the House of Commons.”

Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, cautioned May that “We will not renegotiat­e the deal, including the backstop, but we are ready to discuss how to facilitate UK ratificati­on. As time is running out, we will also discuss our preparedne­ss for a no-deal scenario”. The UK is due to leave the EU on March 29, 2019.

Amidst pressure from opposition parties to bring a no-confidence motion against the May government, Labour said in a statement that it would do so “when we judge it most likely to be successful.”

 ?? AFP ?? Writing on the wall: Anti-brexit demonstrat­ors protest outside Parliament with a giant ‘Vote Down Brexit spelled out in illuminate­d letters.
AFP Writing on the wall: Anti-brexit demonstrat­ors protest outside Parliament with a giant ‘Vote Down Brexit spelled out in illuminate­d letters.

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