EU intervenes on Brexit deal on eve of historic UK vote
Prime Minister Theresa May on Monday published further assurances from the EU on the eve of a crucial parliamentary vote on her Brexit deal and warned MPs that rejecting it would lead to ‘paralysis’ that could see Britain stay in the bloc.
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and European Council President Donald Tusk repeated in a letter that they would not reopen the divorce deal, but offered clarifi- stop arrangement when she postponed a vote on the agreement in December, facing certain defeat in the House of Commons.
As MPs prepare to finally cast their judgement on Tuesday evening, large numbers of her own Conservative MPs and her Northern Irish allies are still strongly opposed.
In a further setback, government whip Gareth Johnson - a Brexiteer and one of the officials charged with getting MPs to vote for the deal - announced his resignation.
‘I have concluded that I cannot, in all conscience, support the government’s position when it is clear this deal would be detrimental to our nation’s interests’, he wrote.
Meanwhile Anti-Brexit MPs have stepped up efforts to tie the government’s hands in parliament to avoid the damaging prospect of Britain leaving the EU on March 29 with no deal.
May repeated that the only way to avoid ‘no deal’ was to support her agreement, saying that ‘if no deal is as bad as you believe it is, it will be the height of recklessness to do anything else’.
But with growing calls to delay Brexit or call a second referendum, she said, “It’s now my judgment that a more likely outcome is a paralysis in parliament that risks there being no Brexit.”
May signed the divorce deal with other EU leaders in December after 18 months of tough negotiations, but it has faced huge opposition in Britain.
The most contentious element is the backstop, which would keep Britain tied to some EU trade rules, with even closer alignment for the province of Northern Ireland, if and until another way was found to avoid border checks with Ireland.
Tusk and Juncker said the EU ‘does not wish to see the backstop enter into force’ and noted that if it was necessary, it would only be temporary.
They promised to work quickly to find alternatives to keep open the border, including using technology, a solution backed by Brexit supporters.
The opposition Labour party, which favours remaining in a permanent customs union with the EU, dismissed the EU’s assurances.
“The Prime Minister has once again failed to deliver,” Labour’s Brexit spokesman Keir Starmer said.