The Denver Post

May gets reprieve from rebellion, but faces warning from allies

- By Jill Lawless

LONDON» British Prime Minister Theresa May got a reprieve in one of her Brexit battles Tuesday as party rebels said they did not yet have the strength for a leadership challenge. But she faced a new headache as parliament­ary allies warned they could remove support from May’s minority government if she does not alter her divorce deal with the European Union.

Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party struck a deal last year for its 10 lawmakers to back May’s Conservati­ves on major legislatio­n. But the Protestant, pro-U.K. party opposes the Brexit deal’s plans for keeping the border between Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland open after Brexit, saying it weakens the ties binding the U.K. by creating separate trade rules for Northern Ireland.

In a warning to May, DUP lawmakers abstained or opposed the government during several votes on a finance bill late Monday.

DUP lawmaker Sammy Wilson said the votes were “designed to send a political message to the government: Look, we’ve got an agreement with you but you’ve got to keep your side of the bargain.”

May defended her Brexit deal in an article for Tuesday’s Belfast Telegraph, saying it “puts Northern Ireland in a fantastic position for the future.”

She said businesses would benefit because Northern Ireland would “be a gateway to both the EU market and the rest of the U.K.’s market.”

In better news for the beleaguere­d British leader, a leading pro-Brexit lawmaker acknowledg­ed that the rebels haven’t mustered the numbers for a leadership challenge.

Jacob Rees-Mogg is one of a group of Conservati­ve legislator­s who have written letters calling for a noconfiden­ce vote in the prime minister. They say the draft divorce deal would leave Britain tied to the bloc’s rules without any say in making them.

The group had previously said it was confident of getting the 48 letters — 15 percent of Conservati­ve lawmakers — needed to spark a leadership challenge.

“Patience is a virtue, virtue is a grace,” Rees-Mogg said Tuesday. “We shall see whether letters come in due time.”

The draft agreement reached last week triggered an avalanche of criticism in Britain and left May fighting to keep her job even as British and EU negotiator­s raced to firm up a final deal before a summit on Sunday where EU leaders hope to rubber-stamp it.

The 585-page, legally binding withdrawal agreement is as good as complete, but Britain and the EU still need to flesh out a far less-detailed declaratio­n on their future relations.

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