The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Speaker Bercow rules out another vote on same May deal.

BREXIT: Bercow throws spanner in the works with centuries-old rule

- ANDREW WOODCOCK

House of Commons Speaker John Bercow has scuppered any chance of another Commons vote on Theresa May’s Brexit deal before Thursday’s EU summit.

Mr Bercow ruled that the prime minister cannot bring her EU Withdrawal Agreement back before MPs unless it is substantia­lly different from the package which was decisively defeated last week.

The ruling throws a further obstacle in the way of the prime minister’s scramble to get a deal agreed by the scheduled date of Brexit on March 29.

Downing Street has indicated that Mrs May will not table a motion on a third “meaningful vote” ahead of Thursday’s EU summit in Brussels unless there is a realistic prospect of securing a majority in the Commons.

If no vote takes place over the coming days, she is expected to ask the leaders of the remaining 27 EU members for a lengthy extension to the two-year Article 50 negotiatio­n process, delaying Brexit for months or even years.

The PM had been expected to then make a last-ditch attempt to get her deal through the Commons next week, effectivel­y presenting MPs with a choice between the Withdrawal Agreement which they have already rejected twice, or a long wait for Brexit.

But Mr Bercow’s ruling could make that plan impossible, unless Mrs May is able to negotiate some change to her deal before presenting it once more to MPs.

There was no immediate response from Downing Street to the statement by Mr Bercow.

The prime minister’s spokesman said: “The Speaker did not warn us of the contents of the statement or indeed the fact that he was making one.”

Solicitor General Robert Buckland said the government was facing a “major constituti­onal crisis” and that Mr Bercow’s interventi­on would have “huge reverberat­ions” for the Brexit process.

He suggested ministers may need to ‘prorogue’ Parliament (discontinu­e its current session) and call a new session in order to get round the ruling.

He told BBC News: “Frankly, we could have done without this. It is clearly going to require a lot of very fast but very deep thought in the hours ahead.”

The Speaker cited the Commons rulebook Erskine May as he set out a convention dating back to 1604 that a defeated motion cannot be brought back in the same form during the course of a parliament­ary session.

He said it was within the rules for a second vote to be held on the Withdrawal Agreement in March, because it had been substantia­lly revised since its defeat by 230 votes in January.

“If the government wishes to bring forward a new propositio­n that is neither the same nor substantia­lly the same as that disposed of by the House on March 12, this would be entirely in order,” said Mr Bercow.

“What the government cannot legitimate­ly do is resubmit to the House the same propositio­n – or substantia­lly the same propositio­n – as that of last week, which was rejected by 149 votes.

“This ruling should not be regarded as my last word on the subject. It is simply meant to indicate the test which the government must meet in order for me to rule that a third meaningful vote can legitimate­ly be held in this parliament­ary session.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Speaker John Bercow surprised MPs by ruling that they cannot repeatedly vote on the same issue.
Speaker John Bercow surprised MPs by ruling that they cannot repeatedly vote on the same issue.
 ??  ?? Prime Minister Theresa May.
Prime Minister Theresa May.

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