Bangkok Post

May suffers loss as hopes for Brexit deal fades

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LONDON: Prime Minister Theresa May of Britain on Tuesday suffered a series of humiliatin­g defeats in Parliament, the strongest sign yet that lawmakers are poised to reject her plan for exiting the European Union.

Also on Tuesday, those hoping that the withdrawal plan could be canceled entirely got a boost from across the English Channel in a legal opinion by Manuel Campos Sánchez-Bordona, the advocate general of the European Court of Justice.

He said that under the European Union’s governing treaty, Britain could unilateral­ly cancel its withdrawal from the 28-nation bloc before the scheduled date of its departure, on March 29, and without having to obtain the consent of the other 27 member nations.

The setbacks in Britain’s Parliament came as Ms May opened five days of debate before the critical vote on Dec 11 that will decide the fate of her proposal.

In a significan­t move, lawmakers on Tuesday voted to give Parliament more control of the exit process should her plan be voted down. This could allow them to avoid the “no-deal” Brexit, a disorderly and economical­ly damaging departure from the European Union without any agreement.

And for the first time in history, they voted that the government was in contempt of Parliament for failing to publish its full legal advice on Brexit — a text explaining the legal implicatio­ns of the deal. That document will now be published, the government said.

In London, the growing assertiven­ess of lawmakers and the breakdown of discipline within the ruling Conservati­ve Party does not bode well for Ms May, who was already facing deep challenges in pushing through her plan, most analysts have concluded.

Defeat on Dec 11 could force the prime minister to abandon her proposal or break up her government, or lead to a power struggle that imperils her leadership.

But Ms May, who has won plaudits for her dogged persistenc­e, is still fighting for what she believes is the best way to honour the outcome of a 2016 referendum decision to quit the bloc.

“We should not let the search for a perfect Brexit prevent a good Brexit that delivers for the British people,” Ms May told lawmakers.

She insisted that the alternativ­e to her plan was either a disorderly exit without any agreement, or no Brexit at all.

Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the opposition Labour Party, argued that her plan would make Britons worse off and was a “huge and damaging failure”.

So divisive has Brexit proved that the two party leaders are unable even to agree on the terms of a TV debate on the issue; negotiatio­ns on a broadcast seemed to have collapsed on Tuesday as well.

Dozens of lawmakers in Ms May’s Conservati­ve Party are threatenin­g to rebel, angered in particular about a so-called backstop plan to prevent physical checks of goods at the Irish border.

That would keep the United Kingdom in a customs union with the European Union, which critics say would mean that Britain would be neither fully in the European Union nor out, and that it would have no say in making rules that it would be bound by.

The prime minister faces opposition from across the political spectrum, as well as growing calls for a second referendum on Brexit, so that voters can have a final say on the terms of the country’s departure.

However, Ms May has insisted that the country will leave as scheduled.

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