Millennium Post

May pledges ‘new & improved deal’ to save her Brexit plan

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LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May on Sunday promised a “new and improved deal” that she hopes will see her controvers­ial Brexit agreement through Parliament when it comes up for a fourth vote in the first week of June.

Writing in ‘The Sunday Times’, May said it was “truly” decision time for MPS when the Withdrawal Agreement Bill returns to the House of Commons and claimed that she would not simply be asking them to think again but will be asking them to consider an improved package of measures that honours the June 2016 referendum result in favour of Brexit.

“When the Withdrawal Agreement Bill comes before MPS, it will represent a new, bold offer to MPS across the House of Commons, with an improved package of measures that I believe can win new support,” she writes.

“I will not be simply asking MPS to think again. Instead I will ask them to look at a new and improved deal with fresh pairs of eyes - and to give it their support,” she said.

May, who is weighed down by mounting pressure from her backbench MPS to lay out a clear timetable for her exit from Downing Street after the fourth vote on her withdrawal agreement with the European Union (EU) next month, revealed that she was open to holding a series of indicative votes in Parliament in a last-ditch effort to try and see her deal through.

“The Cabinet will consider the details of those changes next week. It will also consider whether holding votes in Parliament to test support for possible solutions would be a useful prelude to MPS considerin­g the legislatio­n,” she said.

The beleaguere­d British PM has been struggling to surmount the opposition to the controvers­ial Irish backstop clause in the agreement, which the EU sees an insurance policy against a hard border between its member-country Ireland and the UK after Brexit. However, the Brexiteers within her own Tory party have consistent­ly voted against it over fears that it could be used as an excuse to keep Britain tied to EU norms even after its exit from the 28-member European economic bloc.

May warned that even though her new package will be a stronger propositio­n, it was important for the parliament­ary arithmetic to fall into place to avert a chaotic no-deal Brexit and leave the EU with a deal in place by the latest deadline of October 31.

“While the deal MPS are to vote on will be different, the dynamics of their decision will remain the same. A majority of MPS are against leaving without a deal; whatever you think of that as an outcome, Parliament will do all it can to block it, she said.

The Conservati­ve Party leader also used the interventi­on to make a plea for the European Parliament elections scheduled for next Thursday, when opinion polls indicate that her party will be punished at the ballot box in favour of the newly-formed anti-eu Brexit Party.

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