Daily Mail

TIME TO PUT YOUR COUNTRY FIRST

If MPs back May’s Brexit deal today, we can leave the EU, unite the country and end the political paralysis holding Britain back. That’s why the Mail urges them to honour the result of the referendum – and demands...

- By Jason Groves Political Editor

THIS country today stands on the edge of a precipice. As MPs prepare to vote on Theresa May’s Brexit deal, their choice is simple: provide the certainty the nation yearns for – or lead us into a dark and hazardous unknown. The stakes could hardly be higher. As violent crime spirals, our railways fail, elderly care is in crisis and the NHS needs urgent help, the Brexit debate has sucked every ounce of energy from government. Doesn’t the British public deserve better than this? They are tired of the constant squabbling – and just want to get on with their lives. No, the Prime Minister’s deal isn’t perfect. But it seizes back control of our borders, laws and money. Wasn’t that what Brexit was supposed to be about? So, after the endless months of bickering, we make a heartfelt call to all MPs on this momentous day: Put your personal prejudices aside – and put your country first.

Allies of the Prime Minister acknowledg­ed her plans could be rejected by a majority approachin­g 200 votes – eclipsing record government defeats of modern times. THERESA May is braced for a crushing Commons defeat for her Brexit plan tonight after MPs rejected last-minute reassuranc­es from Brussels.

They believe Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn will then try to exploit Tory divisions by forcing a formal vote of no confidence in the Government tomorrow, which could usher in a general election.

In a last-ditch appeal to Parliament yesterday, Mrs May urged MPs opposed to her plans to give the proposed withdrawal agreement ‘a second look’ in the light of assurances in a letter from EU chiefs Jean-Claude Juncker and Donald Tusk yesterday.

She acknowledg­ed that the plan was not perfect, but added: ‘ When the history books are written, people will look at the decision of this House tomorrow and ask: “Did we deliver on the country’s vote to leave the European Union?”’

Tory Euroscepti­cs and Mrs May’s governing partners in the DUP last night rejected her plea. Sky News forecast the PM would be defeated by 422 votes to 197.

A former Cabinet minister said: ‘There’s no avoiding it, this is the Charge of the Light Brigade’. On the eve of the vote:

Friends of Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary Penny Mordaunt said she would vote for the plan, despite having failed to back it in public;

Attorney General Geoffrey Cox said Mrs May’s deal was ‘the only politicall­y practicabl­e and available means’ of leaving the EU;

Former Tory ministers Nick Boles, Nicky Morgan and Sir Oliver Letwin vowed to press ahead with plans to allow Parliament to seize control of Brexit;

Tory whip Gareth Johnson became the latest government figure to resign over the deal;

Mr Corbyn told Labour MPs he would not hold off from calling a vote of no confidence;

Labour MP Tulip Siddiq has postponed a planned caesarean section to cast her vote against Mrs May’s plan;

Mrs May refused to rule out extending Article 50.

The Prime Minister is expected to make an immediate statement to MPs tonight on her next move. An ally said: ‘In the words of Churchill, she will keep buggering on. She is not going to abandon the deal and she is not going to quit.’

The vote was originally due last month but was pulled at the last minute in the face of overwhelmi­ng opposition.

The PM pledged to negotiate ‘legally binding’ assurances from the EU to calm fears that the socalled backstop, which is designed to prevent a hard border on Ireland if trade talks falter, from keeping the UK permanentl­y in a customs union. She acknowledg­ed that the letter from the EU fell short of what she had requested.

The letter said the EU did not want the backstop to become permanent and Brussels would not impose new laws.

But former Tory minister Mark Francois dismissed the concession­s as only ‘a small fig leaf’.

DUP deputy leader Nigel Dodds said: ‘As things stand we could not support Theresa May’s deal and therefore it will be defeated.’ On Sunday, four Brexiteer Tory MPs came out in support of the withdrawal agreement because of concerns about the threat to Brexit if it is voted down.

The deal suffered its first parliament­ary defeat last night as the Lords voted by 321 votes to 152 to reject it. Mrs May is on track to beat the current record of a 166- vote defeat, suffered by Ramsay MacDonald in 1924.

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