Belfast Telegraph

43 DAYS TO BREXIT

SECRETARY OF STATE DODGES QUESTIONS ON A RETURN TO DIRECT RULE ÷NO 10 DENIES CLAIM THERESA MAY IS TAKING NO-DEAL OFF THE TABLE

- BY ANDREW WOODCOCK

DOWNING Street has denied that Theresa May is taking a nodeal Brexit off the table.

Euroscepti­c Tories are threatenin­g to rebel in a key vote today over a motion tabled in the Prime Minister’s name which they claim would commit her to avoiding EU withdrawal without a deal.

The motion asks the House to reiterate its support for the approach agreed on January 29, when the Commons backed an amendment authorisin­g Mrs May to go back to Brussels to renegotiat­e the controvers­ial backstop.

But members of the backbench European Research Group (ERG) say that it effectivel­y endorses another amendment approved by MPs the same day which rules out no deal but is not binding on the Government.

Leading ERG member Mark Francois told the BBC: “We cannot vote for this as it is currently configured because it rules out no deal and removes our negotiatin­g leverage in Brussels.

“The Prime Minister, if she went through the lobbies for this tomorrow night, would be voting against the guarantees she has given in the Commons for months. It is madness.”

Mrs May’s official spokesman said: “What the motion reflects is the position the Prime Minister set out after those votes, which is that Parliament wants the UK to leave with a deal, but in order to do so it requires us to secure legally binding changes in relation to the backstop.”

“No deal is an eventualit­y we wish to avoid, but one we continue to plan for.

“Does no deal remain on the table? The answer is yes.”

The spokesman declined to discuss reports that senior negotiator Olly Robbins was overheard in a Brussels bar saying that Mrs May planned to wait until the end of March before confrontin­g MPs with a choice between her deal or a lengthy delay to Brexit.

But he rejected suggestion­s that the backstop arrangemen­t — designed to keep the Irish border open in the absence of a wida er trade deal — was being treated as a “bridge” to a future UK/EU relationsh­ip. He instead insisted that it is “an insurance policy that is never intended to be used”.

There were howls of anger from Euroscepti­cs over Mr Robbins’s reported comments, with former Ukip leader Nigel Farage calling for him to be sacked for “treachery and incompeten­ce”.

But Conservati­ve vice-chairman Chris Philp said: “What a civil servant might speculate in bar after a few drinks is, frankly, not that important.”

Answering questions in the House of Commons, Mrs May insisted the Government’s position concerning the Article 50 withdrawal process had not changed.

“We triggered Article 50 — in fact this House voted to trigger Article 50. That had a two-year timeline. That ends on March 29,” she told MPs at Prime Minister’s questions.

“We want to leave with a deal. That is what we are working for.”

European Council president Donald Tusk appeared to express frustratio­n with London’s stance.

He tweeted: “No news is not always good news. EU27 still waiting for concrete, realistic proposals from London on how to break #Brexit impasse.”

Meanwhile, Bertie Ahern said Brexit made him feel like fairytale character Rip Van Winkle, who fell asleep for 20 years and “woke up to find out that everything had changed”.

Giving evidence to MPs yesterday, the former Taoiseach said there was “no possibilit­y of the Irish Government or the Irish people saying the backstop could be time-limited”.

He also sought to kill off the idea that a hard border could be avoided through technology.

“As of now, there is not the technology and they have looked at every border situation to see if there was any case, anywhere where it was possible to trade without physical infrastruc­ture. Unfortunat­ely, there are none,” he said.

He said while technology might be available in the “dim and distant future”, it is not an alternativ­e to the backstop in the withdrawal agreement.

The former Fianna Fail leader, who was Taoiseach from 1997 to 2008, was appearing before the cross-party Brexit Committee in Westminste­r.

He told MPs there was “almost total unanimity” in the Republic behind Taoiseach Leo Varadkar’s insistence on the backstop, which is designed to keep the border open by keeping the UK in the EU’s customs union and Northern Ireland observing certain single market rules until a wider trade deal is agreed.

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from main picture: anti-Brexit protesters demonstrat­e in front of the Houses of Parliament yesterday; Brexit Minister Stephen Barclay leaves Downing Street, and Theresa May listens to a question during Prime Minister’s Questions in the House of Commons
Clockwise from main picture: anti-Brexit protesters demonstrat­e in front of the Houses of Parliament yesterday; Brexit Minister Stephen Barclay leaves Downing Street, and Theresa May listens to a question during Prime Minister’s Questions in the House of Commons
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