The Mail on Sunday

BERCOW’S SECRET ‘ KILL BREXIT PLOT’ WITH TORY SABOTEUR

As No 10 warns PM could fall on Wednesday...

- By Glen Owen and Harry Cole

COMMONS Speaker John Bercow secretly met Tory rebel Dominic Grieve just hours before throwing out centuries of tradition to allow the MP to scupper Theresa May’s Brexit plans.

The pair spoke in Mr Bercow’s grace- andfavour Commons apartment the day before the Speaker tore up the rule book to allow the former Attorney General to table an amendment to wrest control of Brexit from the Prime Minister, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

Mr Grieve, who was last night accused of mounting a ‘stitch-up’ over the extraordin­ary events, refused to reveal what he had discussed with Mr Bercow but insisted: ‘Speakers make up their own minds.’

His amendment led to the Prime Minister’s second major Commons setback in 24 hours.

Now even No 10 is warning that the Prime Minister could be ousted as soon as Wednesday if she suffers another heavy defeat over her Brexit deal in this week’s crunch vote.

Downing Street said that a vote against her on Tuesday would plunge the country into chaos – with a General Election held within weeks, costing many Tories their seats.

The blood-curdling ‘ Armageddon’ threats are part of last-ditch efforts to save the deal Mrs May struck with Brussels.

Conservati­ve Party chairman Brandon Lewis said Britain was facing ‘ Brexit paralysis’ if her plan was rejected by MPs.

Rebel Tories have been warned that forcing a defeat could lead to one of two ‘nightmare scenarios’. Either pro-Remain Tory MPs join forces with Labour to compel the UK to stay in a customs union with the EU; or Jeremy Corbyn moves to bring down Mrs May with an immediate vote of no confidence.

Either way, it could lead to a crushing General Election defeat within weeks unless they fall into line, whips say.

Mr Lewis told The Mail on Sunday that a ‘ Brexit bunfight’ would ‘open up between those who want a second referendum, an extension of Article 50 or a Norway-plus deal’.

Amid growing alarm in No 10, this newspaper can also reveal:

Hopes are fading for significan­t assurances from Brussels over the hated Northern Ireland backstop, with expected interventi­ons from EU Commission president JeanClaude Juncker and EU Council president Donald Tusk tomorrow likely to fall far short of the demands of hardline Tory rebels;

Mr Grieve’s local party chairman was bombarded with demands for him to be replaced as Beaconsfie­ld’s MP;

Mr Bercow faces the threat of ‘strike’ action by MPs, amid calls for him to be denied the peerage customaril­y given to Speakers once they step down;

Crisis Foreign Office meetings have concluded a delayed Brexit is now the most likely outcome;

Jeremy Corbyn’s most senior advisers were at war over whether to call for a delay to Article 50, as the Labour leader said he would set out his ‘vision for Government’ on Wednesday’;

Former Brexit Secretarie­s Dominic Raab and David Davis are planning a joint appearance on the day of the vote to demand that MPs reject it;

Hi-de-Hi! star Su Pollard confronted Mrs May at a Downing Street drinks party over her Brexit strategy.

Mr Grieve was spotted leaving Mr Bercow’s Commons residence on Tuesday – the day before he joined forces with Labour, the SNP and the Liberal Democrats to defeat the Government.

The vote means Mrs May will now be forced to set out her ‘Plan

‘Armageddon’ threat if the PM is defeated

B’ within days if her Brexit deal is rejected by the Commons, as widely expected.

Pro-Brexit MPs accused Mr Bercow of overriding the advice of his officials and ignoring his duty to be impartial.

Mr Grieve, who has described a No-Deal Brexit as ‘national suicide’, admitted visiting Mr Bercow on the eve of the drama but denied having ‘suborned’ the Speaker into accepting his amendment.

A spokeswoma­n for Mr Bercow confirmed he met Mr Grieve but declined to say what was discussed, saying: ‘ The Speaker meets MPs from both sides of the House and from all parties on all manner of things. Meetings with parliament­arians are private and we do not comment on them.’ But the spokeswoma­n insisted that decisions on amendments were made ‘on the day of the business in question and released or announced that day’.

One pro-Brexit MP told The Mail on Sunday last night: ‘ This is exactly as expected: a Remainer stitch-up by Bercow and Grieve.’

No 10 has been trying to manage expectatio­ns about Tuesday’s vote by claiming that any defeat by fewer than 100 votes would be counted as a good result.

The Mail on Sunday understand­s Mr Juncker and Mr Tusk will each s end a s eparate l et t er designed to reassure MPs over the backstop tomorrow.

But the correspond­ence is likely to fall far short of the demands of Tory Brexit rebels, who want the EU to drop the contingenc­y measure altogether.

Mr Juncker’s letter will vow to ‘expedite’ trade talks between the EU and the UK to try avoid the controvers­ial ‘backstop’ measure ever being triggered.

Meanwhile, Mr Tusk will reiterate that the 27 other EU countries all have a ‘firm determinat­ion’ to have a new relationsh­ip with Britain in place by the end of 2020 to avoid the measure kicking in.

He will add that if the deal is not ready by that point, all European states will work to have it signed by 2021 at the latest – meaning the UK would only have to shadow EU trade and customs rules for an additional year.

On Tuesday, former Brexit Secretarie­s David Davis and Dominic Raab will put aside weeks of sniping and leadership rivalry to reaffirm their opposition to Mrs May’s deal in a joint rally in Westminste­r for the hard-Brexit Global Britain Group.

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