The Borneo Post

May’s Brexit plans ‘opposed by 80 rebels in her party’

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LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservati­ve Party faces a “catastroph­ic split” if she persists with her so- called Chequers proposals on Brexit and 80 or more of her lawmakers are prepared to vote against the proposals, a former junior minister said.

Such public criticism, just a day after her former foreign minister, Boris Johnson, cast her Brexit plans as a “a suicide vest” wrapped around the British constituti­on indicates the level of opposition to her within the party.

Steve Baker, a former junior Brexit minister who resigned over May’s Brexit proposals, told the Press Associatio­n that he was not advocating a change of leader but warned May faced a massive problem at the Sept 30- Oct 3 party conference.

“If we come out of conference with her hoping to get Chequers through on the back of Labour votes, I think the EU negotiator­s would probably understand that if that were done, the Tory party would suffer the catastroph­ic split which thus far we have managed to avoid,” Baker was quoted as saying. Rather than the Chequers proposals, Baker said May should seek a Free Trade Agreement under the terms already placed on the table by European Council president Donald Tusk in March, PA reported.

The United Kingdom is due to leave the European Union on March 29, yet little is clear: There is, so far, no full exit deal and some rebels say May could have trouble pushing an agreement through the British parliament.

Both London and Brussels say they want to get a divorce deal at the October 18 EU Council, or, at the latest, by the end of the year.

Any deal with the EU must be approved by the British parliament, which is due to go on Christmas holiday from Dec 20 to Jan 7. If British lawmakers reject a deal in late December or early January, Britain would face the prospect of leaving the EU three months later without an agreement.

Without a deal, the UK would move from seamless trade with the rest of the European Union to customs arrangemen­ts set by the World Trade Organisati­on for external states with no preferenti­al deals.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? May leaves 10 Downing Street in London.
— Reuters photo May leaves 10 Downing Street in London.

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