New Straits Times

Govt may delay Brexit if Parliament rejects May’s deal

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CAIRO: The British government is considerin­g different options, including possibly delaying Brexit, if Parliament fails to approve Prime Minister Theresa May’s deal by March 12.

With only 32 days until Britain is due to leave the European Union, May’s decision to push back a vote on her deal has upped the ante with Parliament, which is deeply split over how, or even whether, the country should leave the bloc.

Before a vote tomorrow on May’s next steps, lawmakers are stepping up ways to try to prevent her from taking Britain out of EU without a deal, a scenario many businesses say could damage the world’s fifth largest economy.

Several of their plans would involve extending Article 50, which triggered the two-year Brexit negotiatin­g period, delaying Britain’s departure from Brexit beyond March 29 — something May has said would only delay a decision.

The government is “considerin­g what to do if Parliament makes that decision (does not pass the deal)”, a UK official said when asked about a possible extension.

The Telegraph newspaper reported that May was considerin­g a plan to delay Britain’s departure for up to two months.

Britain’s plan to leave EU was thrown into crisis after Parliament resounding­ly rejected May’s deal last month with the biggest government defeat in modern British history.

That forced May to seek changes to her deal, which was agreed in November, but her talks with EU have yet to settle on a clear path that can win her the support of Parliament.

On Sunday, May said a so-called “meaningful vote” would not take place this week and instead would happen by March 12, a move some lawmakers underlined that she had all but lost control of Brexit.

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Theresa May

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