The Herald (South Africa)

Three-hour Brexit barrage on May

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British MPs took turns for three hours on Thursday to savage Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit plan in parliament, while down a corridor, members of her own party plotted to unseat her.

The Conservati­ve leader’s statement to parliament to explain the terms of the divorce deal with the European Union was met with a torrent of opposition.

MPs from all parties lined up to say they would reject it, but the attacks on her own side were particular­ly brutal.

One Conservati­ve MP, Andrew Bridgen, directly asked her to resign.

Another, Jacob Rees-Mogg, threatened to submit a letter of no confidence in her leadership – and did so shortly after the session.

May conceded that Brexit required difficult choices, but insisted the deal she had agreed after months of negotiatio­ns was in the national interest.

She paid tribute to the work of her Brexit secretary Dominic Raab, one of two cabinet ministers who earlier quit over the deal.

He was followed by several junior colleagues, prompting speculatio­n the entire government could collapse.

May said she respected their views.

Opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn told parliament: “The government is in chaos.”

He outlined his critique of the Brexit deal as Conservati­ve MPs behind May sat in silence, many checking their phones.

Nigel Dodds of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), the Northern Irish party on whom May relies for her majority, also pulled no punches in his warning that Britain must not become a “vassal state” of the EU.

“I could today stand here and take the prime minister through the list of promises and pledges she made to this house and to us, privately, about the future of Northern Ireland in the future relationsh­ip with the EU,” he said.

“But I fear it would be a waste of time since she clearly doesn’t listen.”

Rees-Mogg, leader of the powerful European Research Group of Brexiteer Conservati­ve MPs, requested May’s advice on whether he should try to unseat her – before, shortly after, announcing he would.

He said he did not know whether his action brought closer the possibilit­y of a leadership contest, which requires the submission of 48 letters of no confidence.

But he said: “There is absolutely no support for this deal.”

Rees-Mogg made his announceme­nt after meeting with euroscepti­c colleagues, including former foreign secretary Boris Johnson, in a committee room of parliament while May continued to speak in the Commons chamber.

“It’s like a bloody alternativ­e government,” muttered an angry minister as he walked past, warning the euroscepti­cs were doing nothing to help deliver Brexit.

Later, addressing a hastilycon­vened news conference on the steps of parliament, ReesMogg was forced to deny he was leading a coup.

“This is working through the procedures of the Conservati­ve party,” he insisted, as a protester yelled “Stop Brexit” at him through a loudspeake­r.

Pro- and anti-Brexit demonstrat­ors jostled for pavement space outside parliament, wav- ing placards reading “Save Brexit”; “Leave means leave” and “Stop the Brexit mess!”; “We want a people’s vote”.

In her attempts to persuade MPs to back the agreement, May warned euroscepti­cs that rejecting it could lead to “no Brexit at all”.

Aides said that referred to the possibilit­y of a snap election in which Labour took office and called a second referendum on Brexit.

But pro-European MPs in the chamber were so vocally enthusiast­ic about this idea that she was forced to play it down.

“We are making no plans for no Brexit because this government is going to deliver on the vote of the British people,” May said. –

‘We are making no plans for no Brexit because [we will] deliver on the vote of the people ’

Theresa May

BRITISH PRIME MINISTER

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? UNDER FIRE: British Prime Minister Theresa May gives a statement to the House of Commons on the draft withdrawal agreement between the EU and the UK
Picture: AFP UNDER FIRE: British Prime Minister Theresa May gives a statement to the House of Commons on the draft withdrawal agreement between the EU and the UK

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