Cyprus Today

PM May: No delay to UK Brexit vote

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PARLIAMENT’S vote on Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal will go ahead on Tuesday, her office said on Thursday, rejecting suggestion­s from lawmakers that she should seek ways to avoid a defeat so big it might bring down the government.

Mrs May has been trying to win over critics of an agreement that would keep close economic ties with the European Union when Britain leaves in March but her warnings that it’s her deal, no deal or no Brexit have fallen flat so far.

With parliament mid-way through a five-day debate on the Brexit deal before the vote on Tuesday which will define Britain’s departure from the EU and could determine Mrs May’s future as leader, she looks set to lose the vote.

A defeat could open up a series of different outcomes to Britain’s departure from the EU, the country’s biggest shift in trade and foreign policy for more than 40 years, ranging from leaving without the deal to holding a second referendum on membership.

The Times newspaper reported that senior ministers were urging Mrs May to delay the vote for fear of a rout and several lawmakers said they suspected the government may try something to postpone what would be a game-changing defeat.

“The vote will take place on Tuesday as planned,” Mrs May’s spokeswoma­n said.

The House of Commons leader, Andrea Leadsom, also told parliament the vote would go ahead on Tuesday.

Graham Brady, chair of the so-called 1922 committee which represents Conservati­ve lawmakers, said he would welcome a delay to the vote to help Mrs May provide clarity over one of the most contentiou­s parts of her plan, the Northern Irish backstop.

But any such delay would anger lawmakers. Both opponents and allies alike have spent days criticisin­g the agreement, especially the backstop, intended to ensure there is no return to a hard border between British-ruled Northern Ireland and EU-member Ireland.

Brexit supporters and Mrs May’s nominal allies in Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party say it could leave Britain forced to accept EU regulation­s indefinite­ly, or Northern Ireland treated differentl­y from the rest of the United Kingdom.

EU supporters say Britain would become little more than a rule-taker, offering the worst of all worlds.

Many want to see the government lose on Tuesday.

Some lawmakers have called on Mrs May to change the deal, and have suggested she could use an EU summit next week to try to win some concession­s from officials to try to ease some of their concerns.

But EU negotiator Michel Barnier said on Thursday the deal was the best Britain will get, while British Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond said it was “simply a delusion” to think the agreement could be renegotiat­ed if parliament rejects it.

 ??  ?? Pro-Brexit protester holds a poster during a demonstrat­ion in London on Thursday
Pro-Brexit protester holds a poster during a demonstrat­ion in London on Thursday

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