Oman Daily Observer

No delay to Brexit vote despite ‘warning’ to May

OPTIONS: May has said that if lawmakers reject her deal with Brussels, the only alternativ­es are leaving without a deal or reversing Brexit

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LONDON: Parliament’s vote on British Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal will go ahead on December 11, her office said on Thursday, despite a newspaper report ministers had sought a delay to prevent a defeat so big it might bring down the government.

May has repeatedly said that if lawmakers reject her deal with Brussels, which would see Britain exit the EU on March 29 with continued close ties, the only alternativ­es are leaving without a deal or reversing Brexit.

The British parliament is mid-way through a five-day debate on the Brexit deal, ahead of the crunch vote which will define Britain’s departure from the EU and could determine May’s own future as leader. She currently looks set to lose that vote.

The Times newspaper reported that senior ministers were urging the prime minister to delay it for fear of a rout.

“The vote will take place on Tuesday as planned,” May’s spokeswoma­n said. The House of Commons leader, Andrea Leadsom, also told parliament the vote would go ahead on December 11.

The day before the vote, on December 10, the European Union’s top court will deliver a judgment on whether Britain can unilateral­ly halt Brexit.

EU negotiator Michel Barnier said on Thursday that the only deal available was the one agreed with Brussels.

“The agreement that is on the table — the withdrawal agreement and the agreement on the future relationsh­ip — are, in our view, the only and best possible to organise an orderly withdrawal,” Barnier said.

May used an interview on BBC radio on Thursday to press on with her bid to persuade lawmakers to back her deal.

“There are three options: one is to leave the European Union with a deal ... the other two are that we leave without a deal or that we have no Brexit at all,” she said.

In one small potential change, May said she was speaking to lawmakers about giving parliament a bigger role in deciding whether to trigger a socalled Northern Irish backstop.

CHARM OFFENSIVE?: Concerns about the backstop are a key driver of opposition to the deal among both May’s own Conservati­ve lawmakers and the Northern Irish Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), which props up her minority government.

Supporters of a clean break with the EU say the backstop, intended to ensure no hard border between British-ruled Northern Ireland and the Eu-member Irish Republic, could

 ?? — AFP ?? An anti-brexit demonstrat­or eats his lunch as he takes a break from protesting opposite the Houses of Parliament in London on Wednesday.
— AFP An anti-brexit demonstrat­or eats his lunch as he takes a break from protesting opposite the Houses of Parliament in London on Wednesday.

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