San Antonio Express-News

Johnson’s Brexit deal clears Parliament with hours left

- By Joe Mayes

Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s post-brexit trade deal won approval from the U.K. Parliament barely 24 hours before the country’s final split from the European Union.

The House of Lords gave the green light to the agreement late Wednesday, just a day before the U.K. leaves the EU single market when the Brexit transition period expires.

Earlier, members of the House of Commons passed the legislatio­n that turns the treaty into British law by a large majority.

The rush to get the deal through Parliament in a single day brings to an end a four-year saga that has gripped British politics. Since the referendum vote in June 2016, the turmoil over Brexit has forced two prime ministers to resign, roiled markets, and seen the country’s relationsh­ip with its biggest trading partner radically redefined.

It gives Johnson a domestic victory as he faces a resurgent coronaviru­s that has already inflicted the deepest recession for more than 300 years and now threatens to overwhelm the country’s National Health Service.

It also removes the threat of a final chaotic split with the EU when the U.K. leaves the bloc’s single market and customs union at 11 p.m. on Dec. 31.

The accord will allow for zero-tariff, zero-quota trade in goods between Britain and the EU — but very limited provisions for services firms, which account for 80 percent of the U.K. economy. Businesses will also face additional costs in the form of new paperwork and the threat of disruption at the border.

The agreement — struck late on Christmas eve—was signed on wednesday by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Charles Michel, before being flown to London to be inked by Johnson.

Johnson said the deal will allow Britain to “trade and cooperate” with other European countries, while retaining “sovereign control of our laws and destiny.”

“We are going to open a new chapter in our national story,” he said. “The responsibi­lity now rests with all of us to make the best use of the powers we’ve regained.”

After five hours of debate, the House of Commons voted to pass the legislatio­n by 521 votes to 73.

Johnson not only won the support of a prominent group of hardline Brexiters in his Conservati­ve Party, but he was also helped by the main opposition Labour Party, which backed the bill.

 ?? Leon Neal / Getty Images ?? “We are going to open a new chapter in our national story,” Prime Minister Boris Johnson said.
Leon Neal / Getty Images “We are going to open a new chapter in our national story,” Prime Minister Boris Johnson said.

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