Scottish Daily Mail

DUP warning shot as its MPs sit out vital Budget votes

- By Ian Drury Home Affairs Editor

THE Democratic Unionist Party made its unhappines­s with the Prime Minister’s Brexit deal clear last night by abstaining from crunch votes on the Budget.

It refused to vote on the Finance Bill as a warning to Theresa May over her plans for the Irish backstop.

The move put the Government on notice that the DUP is edging closer to ripping up the ‘confidence and supply’ agreement that allows the Conservati­ves to govern.

The party’s ten MPs prop up Mrs May’s minority administra­tion through a formal deal that obliges them to vote for the Budget, the Queen’s Speech and Brexit legislatio­n.

But amid increasing rancour after Downing Street unveiled the withdrawal agreement setting out the terms of Britain leaving the EU, co-operation between the parties has come under threat.

The DUP has said there is ‘serious trouble’ with the deal, which risks leaving northern Ireland on a different regulatory footing to the rest of the UK – one of party leader Arlene Foster’s ‘blood red lines’.

A source told the BBC: ‘Tory MPs need to realise that their jobs, their majorities, their careers depend on a good working relationsh­ip with the DUP and May doesn’t appear to be listening.’

While the Government won the votes on the Finance Bill, the DUP’s failure to support it in the first two votes were a blow to Mrs May’s authority.

The DUP is pessimisti­c that

‘A high-stakes game of risk’

she will amend the deal in any significan­t way and sees it as driving a regulatory wedge between northern Ireland and Great Britain.

Mrs Foster voiced her frustratio­n last week that her party had not been allowed to see the draft of the deal before it was debated by Cabinet.

In a string of other developmen­ts yesterday:

Mrs May insisted Britain will be fully out of the EU before the next general election amid claims that Brexit could be delayed until the end of 2022;

A Tory plot to topple the Prime Minister lost momentum amid Brexiteer infighting and splits. Senior Euroscepti­cs have failed to get the 48 letters needed for a confidence vote despite declaring yesterday was the ‘moment of truth’;

Plans for five Euroscepti­c Cabinet ministers to issue an ultimatum to Mrs May over her Brexit deal also fizzled out, with divisions over tactics;

First Minister nicola Sturgeon will hold talks about the Brexit deal with the Prime Minister at Downing Street today. She is also expected to meet Jeremy Corbyn and other opposition leaders;

Spain yesterday threatened to block the Brexit deal after tabling 11th-hour demands about Gibraltar;

Business leaders backed Mrs May, with Confederat­ion of British Industry chief Carolyn Fairbairn warning that Tory plotters were indulging in a ‘high-stakes game of risk where the outcome could be an accidental no-deal’.

Mrs May is due to fly to Brussels this week for final talks with European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker on the deal.

The talks are likely to concentrat­e on the framework for a future trade deal rather than the withdrawal agreement.

Downing Street said the Prime Minister was, for example, looking to improve the provisions for security co-operation.

In an address at the CBI’s annual conference yesterday, Mrs May reminded her critics that people’s jobs were on the line if there is no Brexit deal.

She said: ‘We are not talking about political theory, but the reality of people’s lives and livelihood­s. Jobs depend on us getting this right.

‘What we have agreed puts our future economic success and the livelihood­s of working families first.’

She added: ‘Don’t just listen to the politician­s. Listen to what business is saying, listen to what business that is providing your jobs, and ensuring that you have that income that puts food on the table for your family, is saying. And business is saying we want a good deal with the EU.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom