Yorkshire Post

May in last-ditch appeal to save her EU deal

‘Take a second look’ PM tells MPs as defeat looms

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

THERESA MAY has issued a lastditch plea for MPs to back her Brexit deal, after Brussels chiefs issued a letter offering assurances that they do not want the controvers­ial “backstop” to be permanent.

Speaking in a factory in Leavevotin­g Stoke-on-Trent ahead of tonight’s crunch Commons vote, the Prime Minister said the letter from European Council president Donald Tusk and European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker made clear that the controvers­ial backstop proposal was “not a threat or a trap”.

In an apparent bid to woo Labour MPs, she said she was committed to working with MPs from across the House to ensure that workers’ rights and environmen­tal standards were protected after Brexit.

Attorney General Geoffrey Cox issued advice that EU assurances on the backstop “would have legal force in internatio­nal law”, and said the current deal “now represents the only politicall­y practicabl­e and available means of securing our exit from the EU”.

“The letters published today have legal force and must be used to interpret the meaning of the Withdrawal Agreement, including in any future arbitratio­n,” said the Prime Minister. “They make absolutely clear the backstop is not a threat or a trap.

“I fully understand that the new legal and political assurances which are contained in the letters from Donald Tusk and JeanClaude Juncker do not go as far as some MPs would like. But I am convinced that MPs now have the clearest assurances that this is the best deal possible and that it is worthy of their support.”

But Mrs May’s hopes that the letter would win over enough MPs to rescue her Withdrawal Agreement looked set to be dashed, as the Democratic Unionist Party – which props up her minority administra­tion – dismissed it as “meaningles­s”.

“Rather than reassure us, the Tusk and Juncker letter bolsters

our concerns,” said DUP deputy leader Nigel Dodds, who called on the PM to demand changes to the Agreement itself.

And Tory MP Gareth Johnson quit as an assistant whip to oppose Mrs May’s plan, saying it was clear there was “no significan­t change” to the Withdrawal Agreement.

In the Commons, the Prime Minister acknowledg­ed the deal was “not perfect” but urged MPs who had come out against it to give it a “second look”.

“When the history books are written, people will look at the decision of this House tomorrow and ask: did we deliver on the country’s vote to leave the European Union? Did we safeguard our economy, our security and our Union? Or did we let the British people down?” she said.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said she had failed to secure the assurances she had promised and the Government was in “disarray”. “It’s clear, if the Prime Minister’s deal is rejected tomorrow, it’s time for a general election, it’s time for a new government,” he said.

THERESA MAY has warned MPs that they would be behaving with the “height of recklessne­ss” if they rejected her Withdrawal Agreement in tonight’s historic vote, when no alternativ­e deal was on offer which was negotiable and respected the 2016 referendum result.

With expectatio­ns high at Westminste­r that the Prime Minister is heading for a crushing defeat in today’s crucial vote, Mrs May issued a plea to MPs concerned about the danger of a nodeal Brexit to back her.

“The only ways to guarantee we do not leave without a deal are: to abandon Brexit, betraying the vote of the British people; or to leave with a deal, and the only deal on the table is the one MPs will vote on tomorrow night,” she said.

“You can take no-deal off the table by voting for that deal. And if no-deal is as bad as you believe it is, it would be the height of recklessne­ss to do anything else.”

But she said that recent events meant a no-deal Brexit was less likely than “a paralysis in Parliament that risks there being no Brexit”. Warning that failure to deliver Brexit would do “catastroph­ic harm” to trust in the political process, Mrs May said: “We all have a duty to implement the result of the referendum.”

Speaking in Leave-supporting Stoke-on-Trent yesterday, the Prime Minister said a letter received by the Government from European Council president Donald Tusk and European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker provided “valuable new clarificat­ions and assurances” to address the concerns of MPs who fear the backstop, which is designed to prevent a hard border in Ireland, could become a permanent arrangemen­t which the UK could leave only with approval from the EU.

She said the letter delivered a commitment from the EU to begin work on a new post-Brexit relationsh­ip as soon as the Withdrawal Agreement is ratified and an explicit commitment that the new relationsh­ip does not have to “replicate” the backstop arrangemen­t, under which the UK would remain in a customs union with the EU and be required to observe some of its rules.

Mrs May said there would also be agreement on a fast-track process to bring a new free trade agreement into force, even if some of the 27 remaining members delay ratificati­on.

In their letter, Mr Tusk and Mr Juncker stressed they were “not in a position” to rewrite or amend the Withdrawal Agreement secured by Mrs May last year.

But they assured the PM that the EU “does not wish to see the backstop enter into force”, as it would represent a “sub-optimal trading arrangemen­t”.

The EU presidents stated: “Were the backstop to enter into force in whole or in part, it is intended to apply only temporaril­y, unless and until it is superseded by a subsequent agreement.”

Yesterday Conservati­ve former Ministers Nick Boles, Sir Oliver Letwin and Nicky Morgan put forward a plan to give Parliament control over the Brexit process if Mrs May loses.

Their European Union Withdrawal Number 2 Bill would give the Government three weeks to seek a compromise that can get through the Commons and allow the UK to leave the EU on March 29 as planned.

If that failed, the Liaison Committee – made up of senior backbenche­rs who chair Commons committees – would be given the job of coming up with its own compromise deal.

The only ways to guarantee we do not leave without a deal are: to abandon Brexit, betraying the vote of the British people; or to leave with a deal, and the only deal on the table is the one MPs will vote on. Prime Minister Theresa May

 ?? PICTURE: PA WIRE. ?? STANDING FIRM: Theresa May, who yesterday visited the Portmeirio­n factory in Stoke-on-Trent, warned failure to deliver Brexit would do ‘catastroph­ic harm’.
PICTURE: PA WIRE. STANDING FIRM: Theresa May, who yesterday visited the Portmeirio­n factory in Stoke-on-Trent, warned failure to deliver Brexit would do ‘catastroph­ic harm’.

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