The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

UK’s May defeats Brexit rebels; divisions still reign

- By Jill Lawless

The British government saw its flagship Brexit legislatio­n pass through Parliament on Wednesday, but remains locked in a tussle with lawmakers over the direction of the country’s departure from the European Union.

The EU Withdrawal Bill was approved after Prime Minister Theresa May’s government narrowly won a key vote. The House of Commons rejected by 319303 a proposal to require Parliament’s approval before the government agrees to a final divorce deal with the EU — or before walking away from the bloc without an agreement.

Later in the day, the withdrawal bill — intended to replace thousands of EU rules and regulation­s with U.K. statute on the day Britain leaves the bloc — also passed in the unelected House of Lords, its last parliament­ary hurdle. It will become law once it receives royal assent, a formality.

A majority of lawmakers favor retaining close ties with the bloc, so if the amendment requiring parliament­ary approval had been adopted, it would have reduced the chances of a “no deal” Brexit. That’s a scenario feared by U.K. businesses but favored by some euroskepti­c members of May’s Conservati­ve minority government, who want a clean break from the EU.

May faced rebellion last week from pro-EU Conservati­ve legislator­s, but avoided defeat by promising that Parliament would get a “meaningful vote” on the U.K.-EU divorce agreement before Brexit occurs in March.

Pro-EU lawmakers later accused the government of going back on its word by offering only a symbolic “take it or leave it” vote on the final deal and not the ability to take control of the negotiatio­ns.

Labour Party Brexit spokesman Keir Starmer accused May of telling Parliament: “Tough luck. If you don’t like my proposed deal, you can have something much worse.”

The rebels sought to amend the flagship bill so they could send the government back to the negotiatin­g table if they don’t like the deal, or if talks with the EU break down.

The government claimed that would undermine its negotiatin­g hand with the EU.

“You cannot enter a negotiatio­n without the right to walk away,” Brexit Secretary David Davis told lawmakers. “If you do, it rapidly ceases to be a negotiatio­n.”

But Davis also told lawmakers it would be for the Commons speaker to decide whether lawmakers could amend any motion on a Brexit deal that was put to the House of Commons.

The concession was enough to get Conservati­ve lawmaker Dominic Grieve, a leader of the pro-EU rebel faction, to back down and say he would support the government.

Grieve said the government had acknowledg­ed “the sovereignt­y of this place (Parliament) over the executive.”

While the withdrawal bill cleared a major hurdle, the government faces more tumult in Parliament in the months to come over other pieces of Brexit legislatio­n.

It has been two years since Britain voted by 5248 percent to exit the 28-nation EU after four decades of membership, and there are eight months until the U.K. is due to leave the bloc on March 29, 2019.

But Britain — and its government — remains divided over Brexit, and EU leaders are frustrated with what they see as a lack of firm proposals from the U.K about future relations.

May’s government is divided between Brexit-backing ministers such as Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson who support a clean break with the EU, and those such as Treasury chief Philip Hammond who want to keep closely aligned to the bloc, Britain’s biggest trading partner.

A paper setting out the U.K. government position on future relations, due to be published this month, has been delayed until July because the Cabinet cannot agree on a united stance.

The European Parliament’s leader on Brexit, Guy Verhofstad­t, said Wednesday that he remains hopeful a U.K.-EU withdrawal agreement could be finalized by the fall so national parliament­s have time to approve it before March.

 ?? KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May leaves 10 Downing Street to attend the weekly session of PMQs at parliament in London. The British government is facing another knifeedge vote in Parliament on Wednesday over how much control lawmakers should have...
KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May leaves 10 Downing Street to attend the weekly session of PMQs at parliament in London. The British government is facing another knifeedge vote in Parliament on Wednesday over how much control lawmakers should have...

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