The Sunday Telegraph

Davis fires warning shot at Brexit rebels

- By Ben Riley-Smith

DAVID DAVIS today issues a last-minute warning to Tory rebels not to sabotage the Article 50 Bill amid fears any change will put Brexit back before the courts. Writing exclusivel­y for The Sunday

Telegraph, the Brexit Secretary says that putting into law promises over leaving the EU creates a “greater risk of legal action”.

And he warns that Theresa May would be negotiatin­g with “one hand tied behind her back” if MPs approve two amendments to the existing Bill proposed by the House of Lords. Mr Davis also says that protecting the rights of EU citizens in the UK without reciprocal promises from Brussels would plunge more than a million Britons resident abroad into “uncertaint­y”.

He writes: “There will be many opportunit­ies for Parliament to debate the ins and outs of our negotiatio­n of a new partnershi­p with the EU, and influence the outcome.

“But attaching conditions to a Bill that simply allows the Prime Minister to start the process of implementi­ng the referendum result is emphatical­ly not the way to do it.” The shot across the rebels’ bows comes ahead of a historic week in Parliament that is expected to see Britain’s withdrawal from the EU approved by both MPs and peers.

Mrs May is preparing to formally start talks as early as Tuesday in a landmark moment, nicknamed “independen­ce day” by Brexit supporters.

However, before that can begin, MPs

must vote tomorrow on whether to make the two amendments to the Bill. The first demands that proposals to protect the rights of all EU citizens currently in Britain be published within three months; the second gives Parliament a “meaningful vote” on the final Brexit deal – effectivel­y a veto.

The Government opposes both, but pro-EU Tories are rallying privately behind both changes. Only around 30 Tory rebels would be needed to back the changes for them to pass, given opposition support for them.

Tory whips are so concerned that Cabinet ministers have been forced to cancel foreign trips to make sure they attend the vote while the whips have refused to approve any “slips”, which give MPs permission to be away.

“It is impossible to get away at the moment. If this carries on it increases the incentive to go for an early election,” one MP told The Sunday Telegraph.

Mr Davis’s column warns off any Conservati­ve MPs who might consider backing either amendment.

“At 137 words, the Bill which enables the Prime Minister to notify of our withdrawal from the European Union is one of the shortest on record,” he says. “Yet it has generated many hours of debate in Parliament. That’s to be expected, and a good thing...however, by a majority of four to one, the elected House of Commons accepted the simple, straightfo­rward and clear aim of the Bill. That is to allow the Prime Minister to implement the outcome of the EU referendum, while respecting the judgment of the Supreme Court that this should be authorised by legislatio­n. No more, no less.”

Mr Davis addresses the critics headon. He says making promises to EU citizens in the UK without achieving a reciprocal promise for Britons abroad “risks exposing UK citizens in the EU to a long period of uncertaint­y”.

He says a “meaningful vote” on the deal would be a “veto” and he notes that the PM has already committed to a vote. He also raises the spectre of Brexit ending in the courts if the changes are passed, saying: “The more conditions that are attached, the greater the risk of legal action down the line.”

If MPs approve the Article 50 Bill by tomorrow afternoon, and it clears the Lords later in the day, Mrs May will be free to start Brexit on Tuesday.

No 10 is preparing a “moment” to mark the historic notificati­on of withdrawal, with a letter sent to Brussels and a speech.

Menawhile, the cross-party Commons foreign affairs committee today calls on ministers to start preparing for Britain not securing a deal with the EU.

Its report warns of “mutually assured damage” if no Brexit deal is struck during the two-year negotiatio­n that would keep trade barriers low and guarantee security co-operation.

Crispin Blunt, the Tory chairman of the committee, said: “The possibilit­y of ‘no deal’ is real enough to require the Government to plan how to deal with it.

“But there is no evidence to indicate that this is receiving the considerat­ion it deserves or that serious contingenc­y planning is under way.”

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