Las Vegas Review-Journal

May’s Cabinet backs Brexit deal, but hurdles remain

- By Jill Lawless and Lorne Cook The Associated Press

LONDON — In a hard-won victory, British Prime Minister Theresa May persuaded her fractious Cabinet to back a draft divorce agreement with the European Union on Thursday, a decision that triggers the final steps on the long and rocky road to Brexit.

But she faces a backlash from her many political opponents and a fierce battle to get the deal through Parliament as she tries to orchestrat­e the U.K.’S orderly exit from the EU.

May hailed the Cabinet decision as a “decisive step” toward finalizing the exit deal with the EU within days. It sets in motion an elaborate diplomatic choreograp­hy of statements and meetings.

EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier declared there had been “decisive progress” — the key phrase signaling EU leaders can convene a summit to approve the deal, probably later his month.

But the agreement, hammered out between U.K. and EU negotiator­s after 17 months of what Barnier called “very intensive” talks, infuriated pro-brexit lawmakers in May’s Conservati­ve Party, who said it would leave Britain a vassal state, bound to EU rules that it has no say in making.

Those “hard Brexit” voices include several ministers in May’s Cabinet. Emerging from the five-hour meeting at 10 Downing St., May said the Cabinet talks had been “long, detailed and impassione­d.”

If the EU backs the deal, as it likely will, it must be approved by Britain’s Parliament. That could be a challenge, since pro-brexit and pro-eu legislator­s alike are threatenin­g to oppose it.

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