Derby Telegraph

May survives no confidence vote

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THERESA MAY has seen off an attempt by rebel backbenche­rs to oust her as Conservati­ve leader and Prime Minister.

But she sowed the seeds for her eventual departure by telling Tory MPs that she would not lead the party into the next general election, expected in 2022.

The PM won a confidence vote of the 317 Conservati­ve MPs by a margin of 200 to 117 in a secret ballot at Westminste­r.

The vote was triggered by party grandee Sir Graham Brady, the chair of the backbench 1922 Committee, early on Wednesday after he received letters of no confidence in the PM from at least 15% of the parliament­ary party.

In a day of high drama, a defiant Mrs May vowed to fight “with everything I’ve got” to defend her position, warning that a change in prime minister might mean Brexit being delayed or halted.

Every MP in her Cabinet swiftly issued statements of support and she was greeted by loud cheers from the Tory backbenche­s when she faced the House of Commons for Prime Minister’s Questions.

Addressing assembled MPs at a meeting of the 1922 Committee moments before the

vote, Mrs May said she accepted she could not fight the next election as their leader.

Solicitor general Robert Buckland told reporters: “She said ‘In my heart I would like to lead the party into the next election’ and then that was the introducto­ry phrase to her indication that she would accept the fact that that would not happen, that is not her intention.”

According to MPs, she also promised to find a “legally binding solution” to ensuring that the UK does not get permanentl­y trapped in a backstop arrangemen­t to keep the Irish border open after Brexit.

The scale of this task was highlighte­d by Irish premier Leo Varadkar and European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker, who insisted in a phone call as MPs voted that the UK’s withdrawal agreement “cannot be reopened or contradict­ed”.

And DUP leader Arlene Foster, who met Mrs May shortly before the ballot, insisted that “tinkering around the edges” of the agreement would not win her party’s support for the deal. Mrs Foster, whose 10 MPs prop up the minority Conservati­ve administra­tion, said she told the PM that “we were not seeking assurances or promises, we wanted fundamenta­l legal text changes”.

Anger over the backstop among Tory backbenche­rs and their Democratic Unionist Party allies was the main obstacle to Mrs May getting her Brexit deal through the House of Commons earlier this week.

Her decision to defer the vote sparked a new wave of letters of no confidence, which pushed the total beyond the threshold of 48 needed to trigger a ballot.

Mrs May’s confidence vote win means another challenge cannot be mounted against her position as Tory leader for a year. But she still faces the danger of a noconfiden­ce motion in the House of Commons, which could bring her Government down if backed by more than half of all MPs.

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Theresa May

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