The Scottish Mail on Sunday

PM HIJACKS BORIS’S BREXIT BUS

PM has trumped his £350million pledge in bid to bring hard Brexiteers to heel

- By Glen Owen and Brendan Carlin

THERESA MAY will hope the massive boost to the NHS will shore up her leadership ahead of a crucial Brexit vote on Wednesday.

Allies hope that the move will not only restore Mrs May’s fragile authority, but also help to neutralise Labour’s traditiona­l advantage as the ‘party of the NHS’.

The move – which more than matches the £350 million pledge on Boris Johnson’s campaign bus during the referendum – comes on the eve of a parliament­ary showdown which could determine her fate.

Remain peers are tomorrow expected to vote once more to give Parliament the final say on the Brexit negotiatio­n process – setting up a key Commons clash two days later when it is debated by MPs.

Brexit Tory MPs, already angry at ‘concession­s’ to the Remain camp, will vent their fury if the Prime Minister loses the key vote and gives MPs the power to order Mrs May back to the negotiatin­g table with Brussels if they do not like the proposed exit deal.

In a sign of the febrile atmosphere within the party, Deputy Chairman James Cleverly revealed he would stand to be leader if Mrs May stepped down.

As Downing Street was preparing the final details of the spending plan this weekend, Remain Tory MPs were plotting their ambush.

The Government’s NHS ‘Brexit dividend’ is designed to head off the anger of Mr Johnson and his pro-Brexit allies if they defeat the Government.

Mr Johnson’s claim that the UK sends £350 million a week to the EU was hotly disputed throughout the campaign – with the Remain camp claiming the Foreign Secretary was wildly exaggerati­ng the sum. But Mrs May has faced growing pressure to dispel mounting pessimism over Brexit and show that the process can benefit the country.

Pro-Brexit Tory MP Andrea Jenkyns reveals in today’s Mail on Sunday that she personally urged Mrs May at a meeting this week to provide a more ‘positive vision’ of Britain’s future under Brexit.

But yesterday, Solicitor General Robert Buckland appeared to warn leading Tory Brexit rebel Dominic Grieve and allies that whatever their intentions, the Prime Minister could fall if she lost this week’s vote. He even appeared to compare Mrs May’s position to that of wartime Conservati­ve leader Neville Chamberlai­n, who was replaced by Winston Churchill after a simple Commons vote on adjourning for the day turned into a confidence motion.

Mr Buckland, who last week acted as the Government’s go-between with the rebels, said: ‘There’s a political effect to motions in Parliament. When Neville Chamberlai­n fell as Prime Minister and Winston Churchill became PM in the Norway debate, do you know what the motion was? That this House do now adjourn.’

This week’s votes come amid claims from anti-Brexit Tory MPs that the Government had welched on a deal promised by Mrs May in a private meeting last week to ensure the Commons had a proper ‘meaningful’ vote on the final exit settlement.

Remain Tory MP Antoinette Sandbach warned that the Government’s handling of talks with the rebels last week had ‘actually strengthen­ed resolve [on the rebellion] rather than weakened it’.

Leading Brexiteer Jacob ReesMogg raised the stakes by accusing the Remainers of trying to engineer a ‘Brexit veto’ or a ‘legal backdoor’ to return to the EU.

Last night, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt hailed the boost to the NHS budget as an ‘historic’ gift in its 70th year and a recognitio­n of the ‘superhuman efforts’ of doctors, nurses and other staff.

‘There’s a political effect to motions in Parliament’

 ??  ?? PROMISES, PROMISES: Mrs May faces another torrid week. Right: the Brexit bus
PROMISES, PROMISES: Mrs May faces another torrid week. Right: the Brexit bus

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