Sunderland Echo

WHAT NOW FOR BREXIT? MASSIVE DEFEAT FOR PRIME MINISTER’S DEAL

PRIME MINISTER’S EU WITHDRAWAL PLAN REJECTED BY 230 VOTES

- By Press Associatio­n echo.news@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @sunderland­echo

MPs last night rejected Theresa May’s Brexit plans by an emphatic 432 votes to 202 in a historic vote which has thrown the future of her administra­tion and the nature of the UK’s EU withdrawal into doubt.

The humiliatin­g rebuff was delivered in the House of Commons just moments after the Prime Minister made a last-ditch appeal for MPs to back the Withdrawal Agreement which she sealed with Brussels in November after almost two years of negotiatio­n.

The 230-vote margin of defeat was by far the worst suffered by any Government in a meaningful division since at least the First World War and in normal circumstan­ces would be enough to force a Prime Minister from office.

But there was little doubt in Westminste­r that Mrs May would hang on – and was likely to survive a motion of no-confidence tabled by Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.

Mrs May now has until January 21 to set out a Plan B – expected to involve going back to Brussels to seek further concession­s, with the clock ticking on the scheduled date of Brexit in just 73 days’ time on March 29 .

In a statement immediatel­y after her drubbing, Mrs May said: “The House has spoken and this Government will listen.”

She offered cross-party talks with MPs across the House to determine a way forward.

AttorneyGe­neralGeoff­rey Cox appeared to indicate that the PM will resist pressure to tear up her plan or to seek cross-party consensus on a new approach.

He told MPs that in the event of a Government defeat the agreement would have to return to the Commons later “in much the same form with much the same content”.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn told the House of Commons that Mrs May’s “catastroph­ic” defeat represente­d an “absolutely decisive” verdict on her Brexit negotiatio­ns and said he has tabled a vote of confidence.

Moments before the crunch vote, Mrs May told MPs: “Parliament gave the people a choice, we set the clock ticking on our departure and tonight we will determine whether we move forward with a Withdrawal Agreement that honours the vote and sets us on course for a better future.

“The responsibi­lity of each and every one of us at this moment is profound, for this is a historic decision that will set the future of our country for generation­s.”

But the Labour leader called on MPs to vote down the agreement, saying: “This deal is bad for our economy, a bad deal for our democracy, and a bad deal for this country.”

As MPs voted, noisy crowds of pro- and antiBrexit protesters in Parliament Square could be heard inside the Palace of Westminste­r.

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