The New Zealand Herald

May to put off vote if she cannot win it

If it is pulled, a Brexit delay of up to two years is on the cards

- Gordon Rayner

British Prime Minister Theresa May will cancel plans to hold a third vote on her Brexit deal this week if she does not believe she can win it, ministers revealed.

Instead, Downing Street is understood to be discussing an alternativ­e strategy of holding the vote next week, cranking up pressure on MPs to back the deal or take the blame for a delay.

Liam Fox, the Internatio­nal Trade Secretary, said there would be “no point” in holding the vote “if we had no chance of winning”. He was supported by Philip Hammond, the Chancellor­of the Exchequer, who said: “We will only bring the deal back if we are confident . . . we can get it through Parliament.”

If the vote is pulled, May will have no option but to ask the European Union for a delay of up to two years when she attends a summit of European leaders on Friday NZT.

The EU would be likely to impose conditions on agreeing to such a delay, giving her the option of holding a vote on the existing deal next week, when she will be able to confront MPs with the reality of what will happen if they reject it.

The Prime Minister warned MPs that if they did not back her deal, “we will not leave the EU for many months, if ever”.

Postponing a vote on the deal would mean that MPs could not table amendments before May has discussed a delay with Brussels, leaving her able to go there with a straightfo­rward request for a delay.

If May returns from Brussels with a long delay already signed off by the EU, MPs in Leavesuppo­rting constituen­cies could face intense pressure from voters to accept the current deal for fear that Brexit might never happen otherwise. Some MPs who voted down the deal last week have changed their minds after intense lobbying from constituen­cy parties, with up to 50 Tory MPs said to be facing the threat of deselectio­n if they stand in the way of Brexit.

May told MPs last week that she would hold a third vote on the Brexit deal by Thursday at the latest. However, Fox told Sky News: “I would say to my colleagues, all actions have consequenc­es, and if you really want to deliver the Brexit that we all promised . . . then we need to back the Prime Minister, because there is no other deal on offer.”

But he added: “It would be difficult to justify having a vote if you knew you were going to lose it.”

Hammond told the BBC the vote would “not definitely” happen, adding: “We will only bring the deal back if we are confident that enough of our colleagues, and the DUP, are prepared to support it so that we can get it through Parliament”. Asked if sufficient MPs had changed their minds to alter the result of the vote, he said: “Not yet . . . it’s a work in progress.”

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Theresa May

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