The Citizen (KZN)

Speaker plunges Brexit in crisis

CALL FOR THIRD VOTE: MAY TO ASK EU FOR DELAY

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rime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit plans were in disarray yesterday as her government sought to plot a way around the speaker of parliament’s ruling that she had to change her twice-defeated divorce deal to put it to a third vote.

After two-and-a-half years of negotiatio­ns with the EU, Brexit remains uncertain – with options including a long postponeme­nt, exiting with May’s deal, a economical­ly disruptive exit without a deal, or even another EU membership referendum.

Speaker John Bercow blindsided May’s office on Monday by ruling the government could not put the same Brexit deal to another vote in parliament unless it was substantia­lly different to the ones defeated on January 15 and March 12.

Brexit Secretary Steve Barclay said the ruling meant a vote this week on May’s deal was more unlikely, but ministers were studying a way out of the impasse and indicated the government still planed a third vote on May’s deal.

“This is a moment of crisis for our country,” Barclay said. “The ruling from the speaker has raised the bar and I think that makes it more unlikely the vote will be this week.

“We always said that in terms of bringing a vote back for a third time we would need to see a shift from parliament­arians in terms of the support – I think that still is the case.”

May is due at an EU summit in Brussels tomorrow at which she will ask for a delay to Brexit as her government tries to come up with a way to leave the European Union after 46 years of membership.

EU leaders could hold off making a final decision at that summit on any Brexit delay, depending on what exactly May asks them for, senior diplomats in the bloc said.

“Now it looks like we have to wait till the week after the council to find out what happens,” said one diplomat.

Bercow said his ruling, based on a convention dating back to 1604, should not be considered his last word and the government could bring forward a new propositio­n that was not the same as those already voted upon.

Barclay, who last week said Britain should be unafraid of a no-deal exit, indicated the government was looking at different options and that circumstan­ces, such as an extension or a shift in support, would indicate a change in context.

“The speaker himself has pointed to possible solutions, he himself has said in earlier rulings we should not be bound by precedent,” Barclay said. –

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