Vancouver Sun

May pressures lawmakers to back Brexit deal

Brexit deadline nearing without agreement

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Prime Minister Theresa May tried to pressure U.K. lawmakers Friday to support her Brexit deal, warning that Britain may never leave the European Union if they vote down the agreement next week.

Battling to stave off a second defeat for the unpopular deal, May also implored the EU to help her make “one more push” to get the agreement through a skeptical Parliament.

British lawmakers are due to vote for a second time Tuesday on the deal, which they overwhelmi­ngly rejected in January. If Parliament throws out the deal again, lawmakers will vote on whether to leave the EU without an agreement — an idea likely to be rejected — or to ask the EU to delay Brexit beyond the scheduled March 29 departure date.

“Back it and the U.K. will leave the European Union,” May said. “Reject it and no one knows what will happen.”

In a speech to factory workers in the staunchly pro-Brexit northern England port town of Grimsby, May said a delay could lead to “more months and years arguing” over Britain’s departure from the EU.

“If we go down that road, we may never leave the EU at all,” May told workers at a Danish-owned wind-power factory.

British lawmakers’ concerns about the divorce deal centre on a provision designed to keep an open border between the U.K.’s Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland. The mechanism, known as the backstop, is a safeguard that would keep the U.K. in a customs union with the other 27 EU countries in order to remove the need for checks until a permanent new trading relationsh­ip is in place.

Brexit-supporting lawmakers in the U.K. fear the backstop could be used to bind Britain to EU regulation­s indefinite­ly, and May wants to revise the deal to reassure opponents that it would only apply temporaril­y.

The EU is unwilling to reopen the 585-page agreement, and last-minute negotiatio­ns have stalled, with the bloc’s leaders saying Britain hasn’t provided concrete proposals.

May urged EU leaders to help her out, saying “it is in the European interest for the U.K. to leave with a deal.”

“It needs just one more push, to address the final specific concerns of our Parliament,” she said.

Opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said May’s speech sounded like “a sign of desperatio­n.”

May acknowledg­ed that, even if her deal passes next week, time will be tight to pass the necessary legislatio­n needed to make Brexit a reality on March 29.

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