The Northern Advocate

May: Brexit at risk if EU deal voted down

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Theresa May enters one of the most tumultuous weeks of her turbulent leadership as Parliament prepares to decide the fate of her Brexit deal, and possibly her tenure as Prime Minister.

With her agreement facing almost certain defeat in a House of Commons vote tomorrow, May will make an 11th-hour appeal with a warning that there’s now more chance of members of Parliament blocking Brexit than of Britain leaving the European Union without a deal.

“What if we found ourselves in a situation where Parliament tried to take the UK out of the EU in opposition to a remain vote? People’s faith in the democratic process and their politician­s would suffer catastroph­ic harm,” May was to say today.

“We all have a duty to implement the result of the referendum.”

May’s warning comes after the

Sunday Times reported that some MPs are planning to seize control of the legislativ­e agenda from the Government in an act that would allow Parliament to extend the March 29 Brexit deadline or even overturn the decision to leave the EU. A senior government official described the plan as extremely concerning, since if it succeeds MPs would gain control over not just Brexit legislatio­n but all legislatio­n.

May has 24 hours to save a deal with the EU that’s taken almost two years to negotiate, but the task looks virtually hopeless. The Prime Minister appears no closer to getting the backing she needs than she was in December, when the vote was dramatical­ly pulled before it could be rejected. The question now is what she should do next.

A defeat would leave Britain on course to leave the EU with no new trading arrangemen­ts in place. According to Bank of England analysis, such a chaotic split could hammer the pound and home prices, and plunge Britain into a recession.

Brexit-backers argue that May should go back to the EU and renegotiat­e the most contentiou­s parts of the deal before putting a revised agreement to a vote, though Brussels has indicated there’s little room for compromise. Senior ministers are also said to be urging May to seek a joint plan with the Opposition Labour Party, raising the possibilit­y of a significan­tly softer Brexit.

Labour wants to topple the government by forcing a general election, and leader Jeremy Corbyn indicated his party could bring a no-confidence ballot within days if May loses the vote on her Brexit deal. His chance of victory is slim, and failure would put him under pressure to back the growing cross-party calls for a second referendum. That, in turn, risks a backlash from the many Labour supporters who voted to leave the EU.

The EU is waiting to see the outcome of tomorrow’s vote — and the margin of the expected defeat — before considerin­g its response, officials said, with some predicting that May will have to delay Brexit. A margin of defeat exceeding about 60 MPs would probably mean the deal is close to death and negotiatio­ns are in uncharted waters, EU officials said. A narrower defeat and the bloc may look at fresh ways of making the deal palatable to get it across the line.

The EU was expected to publish a letter today in which the bloc will reiterate that the so-called Irish backstop arrangemen­t, if it is triggered, will only be temporary. But the contents are unlikely to appease Brexiteers who fear Britain will end up being tied to EU trade rules indefinite­ly.

 ??  ?? Theresa May
Theresa May

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