The Star Malaysia

May faces new Brexit setback This is the moment she has to face down Brussels and make it clear to them that they need to compromise, or we will leave without a deal. Senior Cabinet minister

Four ministers on verge of quitting as EU rejects latest plan, says daily

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LONDON: Four British ministers who back remaining in the European Union are on the verge of quitting Theresa May’s government over Brexit, the Sunday Times reported, as pressures built on the prime minister from all sides.

The newspaper also said that the European Union had rejected May’s plan for an independen­t mechanism to oversee Britain’s departure from any temporary customs arrangemen­t it agrees.

The newspaper sourced the developmen­t to British sources, and not sources in the EU team.

May is trying to hammer out the final details of the British divorce deal but the talks have become stuck over how the two sides can prevent a hard border from being required in Ireland.

Britain has proposed a UK-wide temporary customs arrangemen­t with the EU to resolve the issue but Brexiteers in her party want London to have the final say on when that arrangemen­t would end, to prevent it from being tied indefinite­ly to the bloc.

A senior Cabinet minister was quoted in the paper as saying: “This is the moment she has to face down Brussels and make it clear to them that they need to compromise, or we will leave without a deal.”

An EU diplomat on Saturday said they were cautiously hopeful that an EU summit could happen in November to endorse the deal but that the volatile situation in Britain made it very difficult to predict.

Other EU diplomats said several issues remained unresolved.

May is expected to meet with her Cabinet this week to set out her plans for the divorce deal. She was dealt a blow on Friday when junior minister Jo Johnston, who voted to remain in the EU in the 2016 ref- erendum, quit over her plan.

To add to the pressure, a leading member of a group of Brexiteer lawmakers in parliament joined with the Brexit spokesman for the small Northern Irish party that props up May’s party in government to warn that they could not vote for the deal as it currently stands.

Steve Baker, a former junior Brexit minister who resigned over May’s so-called Chequers proposals on Brexit, and Sammy Wilson of the DUP wrote in the Sunday Telegraph newspaper that they could not back a deal if it treated Northern Ireland differentl­y from the rest of the country.

May had been expected to hold a vote in parliament on her deal before the end of the year.

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