THISDAY

Brexit: Ministers Desert Theresa May

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Prime Minister Theresa May battled yesterday to save a draft divorce deal with the European Union after her Brexit Secretary and other ministers quit in protest at an agreement they said would trap Britain in the bloc’s orbit for years.

Just over 12 hours after May announced that her team of top ministers had agreed to the terms of the draft agreement, Brexit minister, Dominic Raab and work and pensions minister, Esther McVey quit, saying they could not support it.

Their departure, and the resignatio­ns of two junior ministers, shakes May’s divided government and her Brexit strategy, raising the prospect of Britain leaving the EU without a deal.

Some lawmakers in London openly questioned whether May’s government will survive.

Raab is the second Brexit secretary to quit over May’s plans to leave the EU, the biggest shift in British policy in more than 40 years. By leaving now, some suggested that Raab could be positionin­g himself as a possible successor to May.

But the prime minister showed little sign of backing down in parliament, where she warned lawmakers they now faced a stark decision.

“The choice is clear. We can choose to leave with no deal, we can risk no Brexit at all, or we can choose to unite and support the best deal that can be negotiated,” she said.

She acknowledg­ed that hammering out an agreement with her cabinet was not “a comfortabl­e process” but said those lawmakers who believed she could get a deal that did not include a backstop arrangemen­t to prevent the return of a hard border on the island of Ireland were wrong.

Sterling plunged, set for its second biggest drop this year on the opposition to the draft agreement.

British financial regulators held a call with major banks asking for feedback on market conditions after the pound and financial stocks sank, sources said. One source said the call was a direct request from Bank of England Governor Mark Carney. The Bank of England declined to comment.

In parliament, lawmakers from her Conservati­ve Party and the opposition parties took turns to rubbish the draft deal, a sign May faces an all but impossible task to get the agreement through the House of Commons.

Many criticized the draft deal, agreed with the EU on Tuesday, for making Britain a “vassal” state, beholden to the bloc’s rules even after leaving in March next year.

Others said an agreement on the so-called backstop would tear Britain apart, leaving Northern Ireland all but in the EU’s single market.

It took an hour of parliament­ary questions before she was asked a friendly, rather than hostile, one, with a Conservati­ve lawmaker saying May had done the best she could.

It was the backstop arrangemen­t, which would see Britain and the EU establishi­ng a single customs territory, that spurred most of the criticism and the resignatio­ns of her senior ministers.

“I cannot reconcile the terms of the proposed deal with the promises we made to the country in our manifesto at the last election,” Raab said.

Less than five months until Britain leaves the EU on March 29, the resignatio­ns put May’s Brexit strategy in doubt.

EU leaders are ready to meet on Nov. 25 to sign off on the divorce deal, or Withdrawal Agreement, but French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe summed up the uncertaint­y when he said events in London raised concerns about whether it would be ratified.

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