Daily Mail

REMOANERS PLOT MORE TROUBLE

MPs get vote on Brexit deal... but Tory rebels put Government at risk with new demands

- By Jason Groves Political Editor

TORY Remainers last night vowed to push ahead with attempts to frustrate Brexit in Parliament, despite being offered a veto on the final deal with Brussels.

In a significan­t concession, David Davis said the final Brexit deal would be enshrined in a dedicated Act of Parliament – meaning it could be voted down by MPs just weeks before the UK leaves in March 2019.

The move came ahead of tonight’s first of eight marathon parliament­ary sittings in which the Government is braced for possible defeat on Brexit legislatio­n by a coalition of Labour, the Lib Dems, the SNP and Tory Remainers.

Pro-Remain MPs were initially wrong-footed by the interventi­on from Mr Davis, with shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer welcoming the ‘lastminute climbdown’.

But last night Tory plotters indicated they would push ahead with a string of amendments to the EU Withdrawal Bill after Mr Davis said the UK would leave the EU without a deal if MPs voted down the deal agreed with Brussels.

Former attorney- general Dominic Grieve, who is leading a group of about a dozen Tory rebels, gave a cautious welcome to Mr Davis’s announceme­nt, but said he would continue with his amendments unless the Government went further.

Mr Grieve, who has tabled 19 amendments, also made it clear he would oppose the Government’s decision to enshrine the Brexit date in law, describing it as an ‘incoherent and thoroughly stupid amendment (that) won’t have my support’. Fellow Tory Antoinette Sandbach said Mr Davis’s announceme­nt was ‘meaningles­s’ without further guarantees. Heidi Allen, another rebel, described the concession as ‘pointless’. Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith yesterday warned that rebel MPs would put the future of the Government at risk if they inflicted defeats over the EU Withdrawal Bill, which paves the way for Brexit. ‘If people keep voting against the Government on this they make the Government’s position more untenable,’ he said. Mr Duncan Smith also rounded on the Labour leader- ship after Sir Keir suggested Labour would accept a deal that kept Britain under the jurisdicti­on of the European Court of Justice (ECJ) indefinite­ly. Mr Duncan Smith accused Labour of betraying its voters, who backed Brexit in droves last year. ‘Staying inside the ECJ would be tantamount to staying in the EU,’ he said.

Government lawyers have told ministers that the exit deal needs to be enshrined in law to minimise the risk of future legal challenges.

But they first have to pass the EU Withdrawal Bill, which begins its detailed scrutiny by MPs this afternoon. Parliament is expected to sit until midnight to debate the first of 188 pages of amendments tabled by proRemain MPs.

The legislatio­n is designed to ensure a smooth Brexit by transferri­ng all existing EU regulation­s into British law. But pro-Remain MPs view it as an opportunit­y to frustrate the Brexit process – and possibly even halt it.

Tory whips hope the concession from Mr Davis could win over enough wavering MPs to avoid a string of damaging defeats. They also believe the rebels could be partly balanced by pro-Brexit rebels in Labour’s ranks, making it possible that the legislatio­n will pass.

Party whips are expecting a string of tight votes over the coming weeks, and all leave has been cancelled.

The new offer from Mr Davis means the final Brexit deal will be enshrined in a dedicated act of Parliament. Government sources played down the pros- pect of it being used to stop Brexit, saying any amendments to it would simply mean the UK leaving the EU without a deal.

Last night the Lord Mayor of the City of London called on Mrs May to agree a Brexit transition deal when she meets EU leaders in Brussels next month.

Charles Bowman suggested a ‘no deal’ exit from the EU would hit the City’s competitiv­eness, and insist that bankers and other financial workers would rather stay in London than move to Frankfurt.

Speaking at the annual Lord Mayor’s Banquet, attended by the Prime Minister, Mr Bowman said it was vital a transition deal was ‘agreed early’ to give firms ‘time to prepare and adjust’.

JUST five months ago, Labour went into the general election with a manifesto promise to honour the referendum result and take Britain out of the EU. Over the coming days many of its MPs will shamelessl­y betray that pledge by doing all they can to frustrate the Brexit process.

The EU Withdrawal Bill – the key piece of legislatio­n transferri­ng EU law on to the UK statute books and ending the supremacy of the European court – returns to the Commons today and the massed ranks of embittered Remainers are planning a guerrilla campaign to sabotage it.

Literally hundreds of amendments have been tabled in a coordinate­d cross-party attack cynically designed to destabilis­e both the Brexit negotiatio­ns and Theresa May’s minority Government.

For the sake of petty political opportunis­m, they are prepared to ride roughshod over Britain’s national interest.

Brexit Secretary David Davis made a major concession yesterday by offering a separate Act of Parliament on the final deal. But this won’t appease the wreckers.

Labour’s spokesman Sir Keir Starmer wants to stay in the single market and customs union and under the rule of EU law for at least a two-year transition period after March 2019 – probably much longer.

Of course this would mean still allowing free movement and continuing to pay into the vast EU budget (which, according to the European Parliament president yesterday, should be doubled).

In other words, nothing would change, except that we would have all the obligation­s and costs of being an EU member, without any say over policy. How would that be taking back control? Sir Keir says the idea of leaving the EU without a deal is ‘unthinkabl­e’. But his political games make that scenario far more likely – if not inevitable.

They play into the hands of Brussels negotiator Michel Barnier, who’s interested only in extorting as much money from us as possible. He has rebuffed all attempts to start trade talks and will use this political turmoil to drag his feet even more.

But the clock is ticking. We formally leave the EU in under 18 months. Mrs May has said there will be an implementa­tion period of two years when new arrangemen­ts are gradually brought in, then that’s it.

If there is no formal deal by then, we will have to revert to World Trade Organisati­on rules. Should that happen, Labour will have only itself to blame.

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