Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

May stands ground on Brexit plan

Prime minister defied calls for her to quit even after two cabinet ministers resigned amid the crisis.

- By Jill Lawless and Raf Casert

LONDON — Prime Minister Theresa May defied mounting calls to quit or change course Thursday over Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union, warning that abandoning her Brexit plan would plunge the country into “deep and grave uncertaint­y.”

Britain’s divisions over its future in the EU erupted into turmoil just a day after the government agreed to a divorce deal with the bloc. Two Cabinet ministers resigned and some lawmakers from May’s own party called for her to be replaced. The crisis threatened to destroy the Brexit agreement, unseat the prime minister and send the U.K. hurtling toward the EU exit without a plan.

In a news conference aimed at regaining some control, May said she believed “with every fiber of my being that the course I have set out is the right one for our country and all our people.”

The agreement with the EU has infuriated proBrexit members of May’s divided Conservati­ve Party. They say the agreement, which calls for close trade ties between the U.K. and the bloc, would leave Britain a vassal state, bound to EU rules it has no say in making.

May insisted that Brexit meant making “the right choices, not the easy ones” and urged lawmakers to support the deal “in the national interest.”

But she was weakened by the resignatio­n of two senior Cabinet ministers, including Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab. Hours after he sat in the meeting that approved the deal, Raab said he “cannot in good conscience” support it.

Work and Pensions Secretary Esther McVey followed Raab out the door. She said in a letter that it is “no good trying to pretend to (voters) that this deal honors the result of the referendum when it is obvious to everyone that it doesn’t.”

A handful of junior government ministers also quit, and leading pro-Brexit lawmaker Jacob Rees-Mogg called for a vote of no-confidence in May.

Rees-Mogg said May’s deal “is not Brexit” because it would keep Britain in a customs union with the EU, potentiall­y for an indefinite period. He said May was “losing the confidence of Conservati­ve members of Parliament.”

Rees-Mogg called for May to be replaced by a more firmly pro-Brexit politician, naming ex-Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, former Brexit Secretary David Davis and Raab as potential successors.

Under Conservati­ve rules, a confidence vote in the leader is triggered if 15 percent of Conservati­ve lawmakers — currently 48 — write a letter to the party’s 1922 Committee of backbenche­rs, which oversees leadership votes.

Only committee chairman Graham Brady knows for sure how many missives have been sent, but ReesMogg’s letter is likely to spur others to do the same.

If a confidence vote is held and May loses, it would trigger a party leadership contest in which any Conservati­ve lawmaker — except her — could run.

The turmoil is the latest eruption in the Conservati­ve Party’s long-running civil war over Europe. Ever since Britain joined what was then the European Economic Community in 1973, the party has been split between supporters and opponents of Britain’s membership.

In 2016, then-Prime Minister David Cameron called a referendum “to settle this European question in British politics” once and for all.

He was confident the country would vote to remain, but voters opted 52 percent to 48 percent to quit the EU, a result that left both the Conservati­ves and the country more divided.

 ?? MATT DUNHAM/GETTY-AFP ?? British Prime Minister Theresa May answers a question about the Brexit draft agreement Thursday in London.
MATT DUNHAM/GETTY-AFP British Prime Minister Theresa May answers a question about the Brexit draft agreement Thursday in London.

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