Yorkshire Post

Ministers set out rival plans for Brexit vote loss

Speculatio­n over ‘no deal’ and second referendum

- ROB PARSONS POLITICAL EDITOR Email: rob.parsons@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

THERESA MAY was battling to maintain Cabinet discipline last night as senior Ministers set out rival plans for dealing with the rejection of her Brexit plan.

The Prime Minister insisted the Government was focused on getting her deal through Parliament despite Andrea Leadsom and Amber Rudd speculatin­g about what might happen if MPs throw out the Withdrawal Agreement in January.

Commons Leader Mrs Leadsom said a “managed no-deal” was a possibilit­y, while Work and Pensions Secretary Ms Rudd acknowledg­ed there was a “plausible argument” for a second referendum.

Mrs May said: “Cabinet ministers and I have all been very clear that we are working and focusing on working on ensuring that we can get the deal that we’ve agreed with the European Union agreed and through Parliament in the meaningful vote.”

At a press conference alongside her Polish counterpar­t Mateusz Morawiecki yesterday, Mrs May said the UK was still seeking “greater political and legal reassuranc­es” from the European Union over elements of her plan, particular­ly the backstop measures designed to prevent a hard border with Ireland, before it is put before MPs in January.

She added: “Everybody is very clear that not only what Government policy is but what we are all individual­ly and collective­ly focused on is working to ensure that that deal is able to be agreed by and go through a meaningful vote in the House of Commons.”

Mr Morawiecki said he hoped the Withdrawal Agreement would be adopted, saying it was the “best deal possible”.

The Commons showdown over Mrs May’s plan is expected in the week beginning January 14 after being postponed earlier this month because Downing Street feared it would suffer a heavy defeat. In a sign of a shift in Whitehall’s approach, a no-deal Brexit is now no longer described as an “unlikely” event in a series of documents on preparing for the March 29 2019 withdrawal date.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said it was still the Government’s position that the “most likely outcome” was for Britain to leave the EU with a deal.

But the prospect of the deal being rejected by MPs has led to open speculatio­n within Government about what happens next.

Brexiteer Mrs Leadsom suggested she had been looking at the option of a managed no-deal – with a minimalist agreement with the EU - as an alternativ­e.

She told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “A managed no-deal does not necessaril­y mean there is no Withdrawal Agreement at all.

“This is all speculatio­n but what I am looking at is trying to find an alternativ­e that, in the event we cannot agree to this deal, that there could be a further deal that looks at a more minimalist approach that allows us to leave with some kind of deal and some kind of implementa­tion period that avoids a cliff edge, that avoids uncertaint­y for businesses and travellers and so on.”

Her comments are at odds with those of some of her Cabinet colleagues, including David Gauke.

He told ministers it was “not a viable option” and “the responsibi­lity of Cabinet ministers is not to propagate unicorns but to slay them”.

In signs of further division, Mrs Leadsom said a second referendum would be “unacceptab­le” - just hours after Ms Rudd’s comments.

Mrs Leadsom said it would “undermine the biggest democratic exercise ever, where we had a clear majority to leave the European Union”.

Ms Rudd, a prominent Remain supporter during the 2016 campaign, insisted she was not calling for a referendum but wanted MPs across the Commons to reach a consensus to prevent a no-deal Brexit. Her interventi­on was welcomed as a “massive moment” by campaigner­s calling for a so-called People’s Vote, with Tory former minister Anna Soubry praising Ms Rudd as “brave and principled”.

Ministers and I are working on ensuring we get the deal we agreed.

Prime Minister Theresa May.

 ?? PICTURE: ADRIAN DENNIS/PA WIRE. ?? EUROPEAN ISSUES: Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, Prime Minister Theresa May and Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond during the UK-Poland Inter-Government­al Consultati­ons at Lancaster House in London.
PICTURE: ADRIAN DENNIS/PA WIRE. EUROPEAN ISSUES: Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, Prime Minister Theresa May and Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond during the UK-Poland Inter-Government­al Consultati­ons at Lancaster House in London.

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