The Citizen (Gauteng)

May hits Brexit brick wall

EU DEAL: PRIME MINISTER MAKES NO HEADWAY CONVINCING REBELLIOUS PARTY MEMBERS

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London

British Prime Minister Theresa May yesterday urged lawmakers to back her agreement to leave the European Union (EU), but made little headway with a bid to coax rebellious members of her party into supporting her deal.

May has repeatedly warned that if lawmakers reject her deal with Brussels, which would see Britain exit the EU on March 29 next year with continued close ties, the only alternativ­es are leaving without a deal or reversing Brexit.

The British parliament is midway through a five-day debate on the Brexit deal, ahead of a crunch vote on December 11, which will define Britain’s departure from the EU and could determine May’s own future as leader. She currently looks set to lose that vote.

The day before the vote, next Monday, the European Court of Justice will deliver a judgment on whether Britain can unilateral­ly reverse its move to leave.

“There are three options: one is to leave the European Union with a deal ... the other two are that we leave without a deal or that we have no Brexit at all,” May told BBC radio.

May said she was speaking to lawmakers about giving parliament a bigger role in whether to trigger a so-called Northern Irish backstop arrangemen­t or extend a transition period during which more EU membership terms would apply.

Concerns about the backstop are a key driver of opposition to the deal among both May’s own Conservati­ve lawmakers and the Northern Irish Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), which props up her minority government.

Supporters of a clean break with the EU say the backstop, intended to ensure no hard border between British-ruled Northern Ireland and the EU-member Irish Republic, could leave Britain forced to accept EU regulation­s indefinite­ly, or Northern Ireland treated differentl­y from the rest of Britain.

“There are questions about how decisions are taken as to whether we go into the backstop, because that isn’t automatic,” she said. “The question is: do we go into the backstop? Do we extend the implementa­tion period?”

On Wednesday, May’s top parliament­ary enforcer, Julian Smith, spent an hour meeting with pro-Brexit Conservati­ve and DUP lawmakers, listening to their concerns. But lawmakers who attended the meeting said he did not offer a solution to persuade them to back it. – Reuters

 ?? Picture: EPA ?? TAKING STRAIN. British Prime Minister Theresa May.
Picture: EPA TAKING STRAIN. British Prime Minister Theresa May.

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