The Citizen (Gauteng)

British govt’s latest bid to win more time

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London – The British government sought to win more time yesterday to secure EU concession­s that could pass parliament and avert a chaotic split from the bloc on March 29.

Businesses and government­s are on edge because Britain is just weeks away from its scheduled departure from the European project after 46 years and still has no firm arrangemen­ts in place.

The UK parliament last month roundly rejected a Brexit deal Prime Minister Theresa May had sealed with the remaining 27 EU leaders.

MPs are set to vote on Britain’s Brexit options on Thursday. But a member of May’s cabinet pledged yesterday to give parliament a further ballot two weeks later – a measure meant to give the premier more time for talks with the EU.

Her meetings in Brussels on Thursday made no breakthrou­gh and fears of a “no-deal” scenario that gridlocks trade are running high.

May’s housing minister James Brokenshir­e insisted yesterday that the government had a clear strategy and timeline aimed at getting an agreement that Britain’s splintered parliament can pass.

“What gives certainty is a deal, and that’s why we want to see people getting behind us, getting behind this process that we now have,” Brokenshir­e told the BBC.

He pledged to give parliament a new vote on Britain’s options by February 27 if May does not come back with new concession­s before then.

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