The Herald

May warns second Brexit vote would do ‘irreparabl­e damage’ to UK

- ALISTAIR GRANT POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

THERESA MAY will today warn another Brexit referendum would do “irreparabl­e damage” to British politics as reports emerged some of her closest allies are preparing for a second vote.

The Prime Minister will urge MPS not to “break faith” with voters and further divide the country by holding another poll on European Union membership as she faces yet another torrid week in Westminste­r.

It comes as Mrs May’s de facto deputy David Lidington and her chief of staff Gavin Barwell were forced to distance themselves from claims they are planning for another referendum in an attempt to break the Brexit deadlock.

Mr Lidington was said to have held talks with Labour MPS last week aimed at reaching cross-party consensus for a new vote.

In response, he tweeted a link to last week’s Hansard record of parliament­ary proceeding­s, where he insisted a second referendum “would certainly be divisive but could not guarantee to be decisive in ending this debate”.

Meanwhile, Mr Barwell was reported to have insisted another vote is “the only way forward”, with Mrs May’s Brexit deal facing almost certain defeat in Westminste­r.

In a further significan­t move, Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liam Fox indicated he could support a free vote for MPS on different Brexit options.

His support comes amid reports senior ministers are pushing for “indicative votes” in Westminste­r to sound out support for Mrs May’s deal, a no-deal Brexit, a Norwaystyl­e option or a second vote.

Asked about the issue on the BBC’S Andrew Marr Show, Mr Fox said: “I have to say I wouldn’t have

a huge problem with Parliament as a whole having a say on what the options were.”

He warned pushing forward with a second Brexit referendum would make it impossible for the Tories to argue against another Scottish independen­ce vote.

Following a humiliatin­g visit to Brussels last week, the Prime Minister will return to the Commons today with an update on her attempt to secure extra concession­s over the Northern Irish backstop.

She will try to kill off talk of a second referendum, telling MPS: “Let us not break faith with the British people by trying to stage another referendum.

“Another vote which would do irreparabl­e damage to the integrity of our politics, because it would say to millions who trusted in democracy, that our democracy does not deliver.

“Another vote which would likely leave us no further forward than the last.

“And another vote which would further divide our country at the very moment we should be working to unite it.”

Mrs May attacked former prime minister Tony Blair over the weekend for advocating a second Brexit referendum, accusing him of insulting “the office he once held and the people he once served”.

She said Parliament had a “democratic duty to deliver what the British people voted for”.

But Mr Blair shot back, insisting: “Far from being anti-democratic it would be the opposite, as indeed many senior figures in her party from past and present have been saying.

“What is irresponsi­ble, however, is to try to steamrolle­r MPS into accepting a deal they genuinely think is a bad one with the threat that if they do not fall into line, the Government will have the country crash out without a deal.”

Yesterday, Mr Barwell tweeted: “Happy to confirm I am not planning a second referendum with political opponents (or anyone else to anticipate the next question).”

Education Secretary Damian Hinds also insisted Cabinet has not discussed a second EU referendum, adding: “Government policy couldn’t be clearer. We are here to act on the will of the British people clearly expressed in the referendum.”

 ??  ?? „ Tony Blair was criticised for advocating a second vote over EU.
„ Tony Blair was criticised for advocating a second vote over EU.

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