Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Britain’s opposition Labour Party said it’s up to Parliament to break the Brexit impasse.

Labour Party wants ‘frank debate,’ more say for Parliament

- By Gregory Katz

LONDON — Britain’s opposition Labour Party is calling for an “open and frank debate” on the government’s stalled Brexit plan and an increased role for Parliament in managing Britain’s departure from the European Union but still won’t meet with Prime Minister Theresa May.

Keir Starmer, the party’s Brexit spokesman, used a speech Saturday to say it is up to Parliament to take the tough decisions needed to break the Brexit impasse.

He also said holding a second referendum on Britain’s EU membership has to remain an option.

May’s Brexit withdrawal plan from the EU was soundly rejected in Parliament this past week, leading to crisis talks with other parties before her return to Parliament on Monday with an amended Brexit plan.

Britain is scheduled to leave the bloc March 29 and so far does not have a Parliament-approved withdrawal plan.

Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz suggested Saturday the EU may be willing to give Britain more time to leave if it has a good strategy, because a “no-deal” departure would be bad for everyone.

“If London presents an orderly strategy and plan, a postponeme­nt of the exit date by a couple of months is conceivabl­e,” Kurz was quoted by Germany’s Welt am Sonntag newspaper as saying.

“One thing is certain: a hard, disorderly Brexit would harm us all,” he said.

Cross-party talks in Britain designed to move the Brexit process forward have so far failed to produce momentum toward a solution.

Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn refuses to take part in the talks May has requested until she removes the possibilit­y of a “no-deal” departure from the table. She says there is no legal way for her to do so.

Corbyn said in a Friday night letter to May that the talks are just a delaying tactic, and he complained that she is unwilling to consider extending the deadline for Britain’s withdrawal or allowing a second Brexit referendum.

Former Conservati­ve Prime Minister John Major told the BBC on Saturday that a “no-deal” departure would be the worst possible outcome, one that would harm millions.

He said Parliament should be allowed to hold a series of “indicative” votes on a number of different Brexit plans and lawmakers should vote without being constraine­d by party loyalties. He says a second referendum may be necessary now that the complexity of Brexit is better understood.

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Theresa May

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