Bangkok Post

May set to face Brexit showdown

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British Prime Minister Theresa May was set to face a showdown with her pro-EU MPs yesterday over parliament’s role in the final Brexit deal, which could influence her entire negotiatio­n strategy.

MPs will vote on amendments to the EU (Withdrawal) Bill setting out how much power lawmakers will have if the government fails to agree to a departure deal before Brexit in March next year.

Ms May says she expects to get an agreement with Brussels, but warned that any attempt to tie her hands could undermine the ongoing negotiatio­ns.

She averted a rebellion by pro-EU MPs in her Conservati­ve Party on the issue of parliament­ary powers last week with a promise of a compromise, but within days they had rejected her proposal as inadequate.

Instead they worked with peers to introduce their own amendment to the unelected upper House of Lords, which agreed to it by a landslide on Monday.

The amendment now returns to MPs in the elected lower House of Commons, where Conservati­ve rebels will ally with opposition parties to finally make it law.

Ms May’s spokesman refused to say if he believes the government has the numbers to win the vote, but made clear that no more concession­s would be forthcomin­g.

“We cannot accept the amendment on a meaningful vote agreed in the Lords,” he said, adding that it “would undermine our ability in the negotiatio­ns to get the best deal for the country”.

“We will be retabling our original amendment,” he said, adding: “We hope that all MPs will be able to support the government’s position.”

Phillip Lee, the Tory MP who resigned as a minister in order to rebel against the government last week, said that the result was in the balance.

“We were always going to get the normal dark arts of Westminste­r taking place, fully expected, but my understand­ing is that the position taken by a number of colleagues is solid, which is why the government is still in negotiatio­ns,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

The vote, due yesterday afternoon or early evening, could have implicatio­ns for Britain’s wider Brexit strategy, indicating where the power lies in parliament.

Ms May commands only a slim majority in the 650-seat Commons, made possible through an alliance with Northern Ireland’s 10 Democratic Unionist Party MPs.

A victory for the pro-EU rebels would embolden them ahead of debates next month on Britain’s future trading relationsh­ip with the European Union, which they are seeking to keep as close as possible.

It would likely anger euroscepti­cs, who accuse the rebels of seeking to thwart Brexit.

They are also becoming increasing­ly frustrated with the withdrawal process under Ms May’s leadership.

Leading Conservati­ve rebel Dominic Grieve denied he was trying to undermine the government or stop Brexit, but warned that if parliament rejected the final Brexit deal, there would be a crisis.

“That’s what wakes me up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat,” he told Sky News television.

“The very reason I’ve prompted this amendment is to provide a mechanism to make sure that we don’t come to government collapse immediatel­y.”

But euroscepti­c Conservati­ve MP Graham Stringer said Mr Grieve and his supporters were only interested in “sabotaging the whole process”.

Despite agreement on Britain’s financial settlement and EU citizens’ rights, the Brexit talks are progressin­g slowly, and there are few hopes of a breakthrou­gh at an EU summit later this month.

Both sides are still publicly aiming for an agreement in October.

Negotiatio­ns are currently stalled on how to avoid border checks between Northern Ireland, a part of the UK, and neighbouri­ng EU member Ireland.

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