Bangkok Post

May faces embarrassi­ng Brexit defeat as Lords vote

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LONDON: Britain’s upper house of parliament was expected to inflict an embarrassi­ng defeat on Theresa May’s government yesterday, challengin­g her refusal to remain in a customs union with the EU after Brexit.

The prime minister, who has struggled to unite her Conservati­ves over Brexit, has said Britain will leave the EU’s single market and customs union after it quits the bloc next March so that London can negotiate its own free-trade deals.

That stance has widened divisions within the party and raised the prospect of a defeat in parliament’s upper House of Lords, where the Conservati­ves do not command a majority.

Some Lords, from all parties, have indicated their support for an amendment to her Brexit blueprint, the EU withdrawal bill, which would require ministers to report what efforts they had made to secure a customs union by the end of October.

It does not explicitly say that Britain must reach a deal on such a union. Conservati­ve lawmaker David Jones described it as an attempt “to give oxygen” to EU supporters in the lower house.

“It is a very strange amendment. Frankly it would not stop Brexit and it wouldn’t require us to stay in the customs union,” he told Reuters, adding that he was not overly concerned by the vote.

The government is expected to suffer several defeats in the Lords over the remaining stages of the debate in the coming weeks.

The leader for the main opposition party in the Lords, Angela Smith, said the upper house’s amendments were a chance to offer Ms May “an opportunit­y to bring forward sensible changes in response to concerns raised previously in the Lords”.

“A failure to do so however, will amount to kicking the can down what could be a very rocky road,” she said in a statement.

If the government is defeated, the bill will return to the House of Commons, where the prime minister could try to get support for a reversal of the amendment. Both houses have to agree on the final wording of the bill before it can become law.

A vote in the Commons could come as early as next month and would add pressure on Ms May — some of whose own lawmakers want Britain to stay in a customs union with the EU — as talks start on a future trade deal with the bloc.

Debate over remaining in a customs union with the EU has become one of the main flashpoint­s in the Brexit debate, which has sowed divisions across Britain.

The main opposition Labour Party says it would want a new customs union if it were in charge of the Brexit negotiatio­ns.

Ms May’s trade minister, Liam Fox, and others see such a deal as anathema if it prevents London negotiatin­g its own trade deals.

But a customs union that sets external tariffs for goods imported into the EU, and allows them to flow freely, would offer a solution to the problem of ensuring no return to a hard border with the bloc on the island of Ireland.

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