Montreal Gazette

MAY’S FINAL BREXIT PITCH.

- WILLIAM BOOTH AND KARLA ADAM

LONDON • A game of high drama and high stakes is expected to play out in Britain Tuesday as Parliament finally gets to vote on Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal.

With just over 24 hours to go before the biggest vote of her political life, May found herself Monday resorting to a mixture of pleading, threats and stark warnings.

In a speech delivered to workers at a British pottery manufactur­er in the central town of Stoke-on-Trent, where two-thirds of the voters cast ballots to leave the European bloc, May told the rebels in her own Conservati­ve Party that they faced a stark choice: either accept her imperfect but doable deal or cut ties with Europe with no deal at all, an option now favoured by many of her fellow Tories, but which economists predict could inflict chaos and financial pain.

“With no deal, we would have no implementa­tion period, no security co-operation, no guarantees for U.K. citizens overseas, no certainty for businesses and workers here in Stoke and across the U.K,” the prime minister said.

Just an hour after her remarks, one of May’s Conservati­ve Party whips in Parliament, Gareth Johnson, whose job it is to wrangle votes for prime minister’s agenda, abruptly resigned. He was the 13th member of May’s government to quit over Brexit.

On the eve of Tuesday’s historic vote in the House of Commons, lawmakers remained deeply unhappy with the terms of the withdrawal agreement May spent two years negotiatin­g in Brussels.

The opponents say May’s accord condemns Britain to be a “vassal” of Europe, taking laws, but not writing them. The Euroskepti­cs argue that the 585-page withdrawal agreement keeps Britain too closely aligned with European tariff rules and customs regulation­s and forestalls bigger, better trade deals around the world.

During a speech to Parliament Monday, May urged skeptical lawmakers to think again.

“Whatever you may have previously concluded, over these next 24 hours, give this deal a second look,” May said.

In response, the leader of the Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn said that nothing had changed since December, when May pulled the vote because it was facing defeat. He called on lawmakers to “reject a deal that is clearly bad for this country.”

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Theresa May

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