The Citizen (Gauteng)

40 to vote against May’s Brexit plan

PARTY LAWMAKERS: WANT SHARPER BREAK WITH EU

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But Theresa urges bloc to respond in kind to her ‘serious and workable’ idea.

Britain’s former Brexit minister David Davis has said up to 40 lawmakers from Prime Minister Theresa May’s party will vote against her plans to leave the European Union, meaning she may struggle to get her deal through parliament.

The United Kingdom is due to leave the EU on March 29 but little is clear.

There is so far no full exit agreement and some rebels in May’s Conservati­ve Party have threatened to vote down a deal if she clinches one.

Davis told Huffington Post there was a “rock-solid” core of party lawmakers who belonged to the European Research Group (ERG), a grouping which wants a sharper break with the EU and were willing to vote down her plans.

The three largest opposition parties, Labour, the Scottish National Party and Liberal Democrats, have all publicly said they will oppose the prime minister’s plans.

If 40 of May’s 315 lawmakers and the opposition parties voted against a Brexit deal based on her proposals, she would fall short of the number needed to pass the legislatio­n.

This would increase the likelihood that Britain would face leaving the EU without an agreement and of a general election or even a second referendum.

“Every group in any political party has difference­s, egos and so on,” Davis said.

“But with Labour voting against, the critical size of the voting bloc is quite small, it’s basically a dozen people. The rock-solid core of the ERG is a multiple of that. I’m not even an ERG member. It’s probably 30, 40.”

Under May’s proposals, Britain will seek a free trade area for goods with the EU, largely by accepting a “common rulebook” for goods and British participat­ion in EU agencies that provide authorisat­ions for goods.

Some Brexiteers say those proposals would ensure the EU kept control over swathes of the British economy, and thus run counter to the spirit of her manifesto pledge to leave the EU Customs Union and the Single Market.

May spent Wednesday night appealing directly to fellow European Union leaders to drop “unacceptab­le” Brexit demands that she said could rip Britain apart, urging the bloc to respond in kind to her “serious and workable” plan.

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