May wins no-confidence vote; Brexit deal still elusive
British Prime LONDON —
Minister Theresa May survived a no-confidence vote in Parliament on Wednesday to remain in office but saw
— more of her power ebb away as she battled to keep Brexit on track after lawmakers demolished her European Union divorce deal.
May won a narrow victory, 325 votes to 306 votes, on an opposition motion seeking to topple her government and trigger a general election.
Now it’s back to Brexit, where May is caught between the rock of her own nego- tiating red lines and the hard place of a Parliament that wants to force a radical change of course.
After winning the vote, May said she would hold talks “in a constructive spirit” with leaders of opposition parties and other lawmakers, starting immediately, in a bid to find a way forward for Brit- ain’s EU exit.
Legislators ripped up May’s Brexit blueprint Tues- day by rejecting the divorce agreement she has negotiated with the EU over the last two years. That it would lose was widely expected, but the scale of the rout — 432 votes to 202, the biggest defeat government defeat in British parliamentary history — was devastating for May’s leadership and her Brexit deal.
Opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn responded with the no-confidence motion, and urged the government to “do the right thing and resign.”