Cape Argus

House of Lords Brexit blow for May

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UK PRIME Minister Theresa May suffered a defeat on her key Brexit legislatio­n in the House of Lords on Monday, setting up a battle with the House of Commons later this week.

Lawmakers in the unelected upper house backed an amendment to ensure a “meaningful vote” for Parliament on any Brexit deal agreed with the EU – or on what to do if there’s no deal – 54-235.

The bill will now return to the Commons today for what is expected to be a knife-edge vote that could determine the outcome of Brexit talks. Pro-European lawmakers in May’s own party are planning to rebel against the government as they seek to prevent the no-deal Brexit scenario that businesses fear most.

The Lords vote, which was widely expected, inserts a clause into the bill that would give Parliament the power to direct the final stage of Brexit negotiatio­ns. Parliament, which backs a softer Brexit than the one being pursued by the government, would be able to block a “no-deal” split.

“Ministers, the prime minister in particular, have promised a meaningful vote, that promise has not been honoured,” former minister Douglas Hogg, who sits in the House of Lords as Viscount Hailsham and introduced the amendment,

BILL NOW RETURNS TO THE COMMONS FOR WHAT IS WIDELY ANTICIPATE­D WILL BE A KNIFE-EDGE VOTE

told lawmakers. “If your lordships want Parliament to have a meaningful vote, Parliament must insist.”

Brexit-backers oppose the amendment as they say it strips the government of negotiatin­g leverage if it can’t walk away, and they also think its proponents are trying to reverse the divorce.

“To rule out “no deal” as an option completely, even as a theoretica­l negotiatin­g objective, places the government in an impossible position,” former chancellor of the exchequer Norman Lamont told lawmakers.

“If we are going to make ‘no deal’ completely unthinkabl­e, then we are in effect underminin­g the position of our negotiator­s.” – Bloomberg

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