The Scotsman

May battles on as her power drains away

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS Westminste­r Correspond­ent

Theresa May has pledged to “see this through” as Brexiteers fired the starting gun on a bid to oust her from Downing Street.

On a dramatic day that saw members of her Cabinet and MPS tell the Prime Minister they would not support her Brexit deal, Mrs May insisted she would press ahead.

Two Cabinet ministers, including Brexit secretary Dominic Raab, and two junior ministers resigned yesterday, claiming the draft withdrawal deal agreed in Brussels was a betrayal of the EU referendum vote and risked damaging the Union.

Leading Brexiteer Jacob Rees-mogg signalled the start of an organised attempt to depose Mrs May, submitting a letter of no confidence in her leadership and calling on fellow Tories to do the same.

The Prime Minister could be ousted “not in months, but weeks”, Mr Reesmogg said. Half a dozen other MPS publicly confirmed they had also called for a vote of no confidence in Mrs May’s leadership.

In his resignatio­n letter, Mr Raab said Mrs May’s draft “divorce” deal from the

“I believe with every fibre of my being that the course I have set out is the right one for our country and all our people”

THERESA MAY

Everywhere you looked, Tories were scrapping with one another. It was just like Boycott and Botham at the crease

EU was a “very real threat to the integrity of the United Kingdom”.

In his letter to the Prime Minister, Mr Raab said he could not accept “an indefinite backstop arrangemen­t” for the Irish border, included in the withdrawal agreement.

He said: “No democratic nation has ever signed up to be bound by such an extensive regime, imposed externally without any democratic control over the laws to be applied, nor the ability to decide to exit the arrangemen­t.”

He was joined in resigning by work and pensions secretary Esther Mcvey, Northern Ireland minister Shailesh Vara and Brexit minister Suella Braverman.

Two more Tories quit jobs as parliament­ary private secretarie­s or deputy chairs of the Conservati­ve Party.

Last night it appeared Downing Street had averted the possible resignatio­n of Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary Penny Mordaunt, but Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove left a meeting at Number 10 without making a statement, adding to fears he was on the brink of quitting.

Reports suggest he was offered Mr Raab’s job as Brexit Secretary, but demanded Mrs May’s draft deal be torn up and renegotiat­ed as a condition of staying in the Cabinet.

The pound lost nearly 2 per cent of its value against the euro, while shares in banks and house builders were also hit hard in the markets. The Royal Bank of Scotland fell by 9.5 per cent, wiping £2.84 billion off its value.

During three hours of questionin­g in the House of Commons, the Prime Minister faced Tory backbench accusation­s the Brexit deal agreed by Cabinet on Wednesday was “dead on arrival” and would never survive the parliament­ary vote expected next month.

Only a handful of her own MPS spoke up in favour of the plan, denounced by Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn as a “half-baked deal”.

“I plead with you to accept the political reality of the situation you now face,” Mrs May was told by Tory MP Mark Francois.

But in a defiant press conference at 10 Downing Street, the Prime Minister insisted she would “see this through”.

She compared herself to her tenaciousc­ricketingh­ero,telling reporters: “What do you know about Geoffrey Boycott? Geoffrey Boycott stuck to it and he got the runs in the end.” Mrs May said: “I believe with every fibre of my being that the course I have set out is the right one for our country and all our people.”

She added: “Leadership is about taking the right decisions, not the easy ones.

“As PM my job is to bring back a deal that delivers on the vote of the British people, that does that by ending free movement ... ensuring we are not sending vast annual sums to the EU any longer, ending the jurisdicti­on of the European Court of Justice, but also protects jobs and protects people’s livelihood­s, protects our security, protects the union of the United Kingdom.

“I believe this is a deal which does deliver that, which is in the national interest and am I going to see this through? Yes.”

But the wave of opposition to Mrs May’s proposed Brexit deal leaves her leadership hanging in the balance and suggests its passage through Parliament could be impossible.

Launching a leadership coup with a press conference outside Westminste­r, Mr Reesmogg declared her deal “has turned out to be worse than anticipate­d and fails to meet the promises given to the nation by the Prime Minister”.

“This is nothing to do with the ambition of Brexiteers,” he said. “It is everything to do with the ambition of Brexit for this country.”

His move is expected to be matched by other ERG members, raising expectatio­ns the tally of letters to the chairman of the backbench 1922 Committee, Sir Graham Brady, may soon pass the threshold of 48 to trigger a confidence vote.

SNP Westminste­r leader Ian Blackford MP said it had been an “excruciati­ng” day for the Prime Minister that showed her authority had disappeare­d.

“Her statement this evening was a chance to put better options back on the table that could command a Commons majority – such as continued single market membership for Scotland and the rest of the UK,” he said.

“But it’s increasing­ly clear that the Prime Minister is determined to subject Scotland to the immense damage to jobs and living standards, all because of a bitter Tory civil war.”

Labour said the government was “falling apart before our eyes”, while Liberal Democrat leader Sir Vince Cable said Mrs May “appears to be in denial”.

The developmen­ts threaten to derail the Prime Minister’s Brexit strategy ahead of a crucial EU summit, which European Council president Donald Tusk confirmed would take place on 25 November “if nothing extraordin­ary happens”.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel made clear there was little appetite in Brussels to reopen the draft agreement, saying there was “no question” of returning to the text that was “on the table”.

However, Mr Tusk boosted the hopes of campaigner­s for a second EU referendum by suggesting Brussels could cancel Brexit, saying the EU was “best prepared” for a “no-brexit scenario”.

A Yougov poll conducted yesterday after the Prime Minister’s deal with Brussels was unveiled found twice as many people oppose the agreement as support it, by 42 per cent to 19 per cent.

The survey of 3,154 people found Leave and Remain supporters had similar views on it, with 42 per cent of Brexit supporters against it, along with 47 per cent of pro-eu voters, with 22 per cent and 20 per cent respective­ly in favour of it.

More than four in ten people (44 per cent) believe the Prime Minister and her team could have got a better deal out of Brussels. Less than one in five (19 per cent) say they thought this was the best agreement possible. A separate poll suggested almost half of voters now back a second Brexit referendum. When you run the Brexit department, you only have one job; negotiate Brexit.

Yesterday, the department maintained its perfect record. Every holder of the job has quit to oppose the Brexit they were responsibl­e for negotiatin­g. Such is the logic of British politics in the Brexit era.

A department at war with its own policy and a party at war with itself. How deep are the divisions in the Conservati­ves? Just look into the eyes of David Mundell as he delivered his response to Dominic Raab, who put the Scottish Secretary on the spot by suggesting the Brexit deal was a risk to the Union. It takes a lot for Fluffy to call a fellow Tory a carpetbagg­er on camera.

By the time Theresa May was standing at the dispatch box to update to MPS on the draft deal Cabinet had agreed to, five of her ministers were

gone. She stood for three hours and fully a third of that time had elapsed before a single sympatheti­c question was bowled her way.

He’s known as the MP for the 18th century and as befits Jacob Rees-mogg, he delivered the mortal blow in language so baroque it was barely understand­able. “Should I not write to my honourable friend, the Member for Altrincham and Sale West” deserves to become a go-to threat in ordinary usage. It means “I’m getting you sacked”.

As one comically patrician MP was menacing the Prime Minister, another was being courted by a desperate government. The chief whip was spotted whispering into the ear of Rory Stewart, Britannia’s one-time oriental envoy, possibly offering a job.

The ultra-loyal former army officer tweeted a picture of Rees-mogg with a quote from Disraeli: “There is scarcely a less dignified entity than a patrician in a panic.” It held out the prospect of Parliament’s two poshest residents squaring off in a Victorian duel, épées drawn.

Sadly, Stewart took the loyalty a bit too far, proving Disraeli’s maxim by making up the figure of 80 per cent support for May’s deal among the public during a BBC interview and being forced into a grovelling apology.

After a meeting with Brexit co-conspirato­rs, Rees-mogg went outside to deliver his message to TV news cameras outside. No-one has worked harder these past two days – not the Prime Minister, civil servants, ministers or journalist­s – than the man who shouts ‘STOP BREXIT’ at regular intervals outside Westminste­r. He wasn’t going to miss the biggest week of his “career”. He nearly drowned out May in Downing Street on Wednesday night and as her other tormentor addressed the media, all you could hear was “YOU DON’T HAVE A CLUE REES-MOGG”.

Realising they needed pictures other than three hours of the Prime Minister being abused by her own MPS, a press conference was hastily assembled by Number 10.

It allowed May to call upon her kindred spirit, the cricketer Geoffrey Boycott, who was so popular with his fellow England players that Ian Botham sang “bye bye Boycott” when the batsmanwas axed.

“He stuck in and got the runs,” May said when asked about the ministeria­l batting collapse. But Boycott had the captaincy taken off him, too.

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 ??  ?? 2 Theresa May enjoys a lighter moment during a press conference yesterday; Jacob Rees-mogg outside Westminste­r; people watch the Prime Minister’s speech in a London pub; Mrs May making her statement in the House of Commons
2 Theresa May enjoys a lighter moment during a press conference yesterday; Jacob Rees-mogg outside Westminste­r; people watch the Prime Minister’s speech in a London pub; Mrs May making her statement in the House of Commons
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