Yorkshire Post

Reckoning for PM as Brexit deal is reached

Draft agreement is set to go in front of Cabinet

- ARJ SINGH WESTMINSTE­R CORRESPOND­ENT Email: arj.singh@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @singharj

A DRAFT Brexit deal has been agreed by British and EU negotiator­s in Brussels and will today be put by Theresa May to a historic meeting of the Cabinet for approval.

Cabinet Ministers were invited into Downing Street last night to read the draft agreement and will convene for a special meeting at 2pm to “decide on next steps”.

Getting approval from the Cabinet will be the first in a series of perilous steps towards a deal on the terms of Britain’s departure from the EU on March 29, including a knife-edge vote of MPs expected in mid-December.

Ministers yesterday came under immediate pressure from Brexiteers and the Democratic Unionist Party which props up the PM’s minority Government to reject the deal and force a rethink, or failing that to resign.

One Brexiteer source urged Ministers to “look deep into their soul” and ask themselves whether the draft deal is really a good one for Britain. But the source admitted they were not expecting resignatio­ns from the Cabinet, despite suggesting Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab was “one to watch”.

It is a moment of high danger for Mrs May although many Westminste­r observers feel she could lose more junior Cabinet Brexiteers such as Penny Mordaunt and Esther McVey and keep her job.

However, the resignatio­n of Mr Raab, who has reportedly pushed for a unilateral escape route from the Irish backstop plan, could however threaten the PM’s position and potentiall­y throw the Brexit process into chaos.

Even if the deal is approved by Cabinet, Mrs May will have to get it through the parliament­ary vote, with Labour, the DUP and Tory Brexiteers and Remainers alike lining up to potentiall­y vote it down.

Chief Whip Julian Smith said Ministers would want to study the agreement carefully but said he was confident they could get it through the Commons.

“I am confident that we will get this through Parliament and that we can deliver on what the Prime Minister committed to on delivering Brexit,” the North Yorkshire MP told reporters.

Confirmati­on that a deal had been reached by follows months of protracted talks in Brussels.

But Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn indicated his party, which could hold the key to getting a deal through Parliament, would oppose the deal alongside dozens of Tory Brexiteers, some Tory Remainers and the 10 DUP MPs.

He said: “From what we know of the shambolic handling of these negotiatio­ns, this is unlikely to be a good deal.”

THERESA MAY faced a Brexiteer backlash last night and claims of a ‘capitulati­on’ as her Cabinet began considerat­ion of a deal with Brussels.

Number 10 confirmed a draft deal had been reached by officials negotiatin­g in Brussels after months of protracted talks.

Ministers have been invited to Downing Street to read documents relating to the agreement before a special Cabinet meeting today.

Former foreign secretary Boris Johnson urged his ex-Cabinet colleagues to “chuck it out”, warning that the proposals made a “nonsense of Brexit”.

And Jacob Rees-Mogg, chairman of the influentia­l European Research Group of dozens of Tory MPs, said: “It is a failure of the Government’s negotiatin­g position, it is a failure to deliver on Brexit and it is potentiall­y dividing up the United Kingdom.”

A series of ministers were seen entering and leaving Downing Street following the Number 10 announceme­nt.

Brexiteers lined up to condemn the deal before its details had even been officially confirmed, prompting criticism from Scarboroug­h MP and former Conservati­ve Minister Robert Goodwill. Mr Johnson told the BBC: “For the first time in a thousand years, this place, this Parliament, will not have a say over the laws that govern this country. It is a quite incredible state of affairs.”

Mr Rees-Mogg told the broadcaste­r: “White flags have gone up all over Whitehall. It is a betrayal of the Union.

Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith suggested Mrs May’s administra­tion could collapse over the deal. He warned that if reports of the deal’s contents were true, the Government was “breaking their own agreed position and will be bringing back something that is untenable”.

He added that “if the Cabinet agrees it, the party certainly won’t”.

Asked if the Government’s days were numbered, he said: “If this is the case almost certainly, yes.”

Former Brexit Secretary David Davis, MP for Haltempric­e and Howden, wrote on Twitter last night: “This is the moment of truth. This is the fork in the road.

“Do we pursue a future as an independen­t nation or accept EU domination, imprisonme­nt in the customs union and 2nd class status?

“Cabinet and all Conservati­ve MPs should stand up, be counted and say no to this capitulati­on.” Mr Goodwill told The Yorkshire

Post: “People like Boris Johnson seem to be rejecting the deal even before they have had a chance to read it. If this agreement is rejected in the House of Commons then we crash out in a way that will be very damaging to businesses and jobs.”

Nigel Dodds, deputy leader of the DUP which props up Mrs May’s minority administra­tion, said that the deal as reported would leave Northern Ireland “subject to the rules and laws set in Brussels with no democratic input or any say”. He added: “We object to that on constituti­onal grounds that our laws would be made in Brussels, not in Westminste­r or Belfast. That is the fundamenta­l red line.”

Neither Brussels nor Dublin confirmed that a deal had been reached, despite the Number 10 announceme­nt. A spokesman for chief EU negotiator Michel Barnier said the latest in the negotiatio­ns had been set out earlier by commission vice president Frans Timmermans, who said that while the talks were making progress “we are not there yet”.

The European Commission would “take stock” today, he added.

A spokesman for Ireland’s deputy premier Simon Coveney said that negotiatio­ns were at a “sensitive” juncture. “We are not commenting on media speculatio­n around the withdrawal agreement,” the spokesman said yesterday. “Michel Barnier and the task force are charged with negotiatin­g with the UK and we have been in constant communicat­ion with them throughout.”

White flags have gone up all over Whitehall. It is a betrayal of the Union. Jacob Rees-Mogg, chairman of the influentia­l European Research Group.

 ?? PICTURE: VICTORIA JONES/PA WIRE ?? DRAFT DEAL: Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab leaves Downing Street, London, after the announceme­nt.
PICTURE: VICTORIA JONES/PA WIRE DRAFT DEAL: Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab leaves Downing Street, London, after the announceme­nt.

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