Las Vegas Review-Journal

May to Labour: ‘Let’s do a deal’

Potential compromise on Brexit worries many Conservati­ves

- By Jill Lawless The Associated Press

LONDON — Britain’s Conservati­ve government and opposition Labour Party have a duty to strike a compromise Brexit agreement to end months of political deadlock over Britain’s exit from the European Union, Prime Minister Theresa May said Sunday.

Writing in the Mail on Sunday newspaper, May told Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn: “Let’s do a deal.”

The prospect of a cross-party compromise has alarmed many Conservati­ves, and May acknowledg­ed that it was “not what I wanted, either.”

“But we have to find a way to break the deadlock — and I believe the results of the local elections give fresh urgency to this,” she wrote.

The Conservati­ves are desperate to move forward after losing hundreds of positions in last week’s local authority elections. Labour also suffered losses as voters punished both main parties for the Brexit impasse.

Almost three years after Britain voted to leave the EU, the date and terms of Brexit remain uncertain. The U.K.’S departure date has been postponed from

March 29 until Oct. 31 because May has been unable to get lawmakers to approve her divorce deal.

But suggestion­s that May’s government might make a deal that accepts Labour’s demand for close economic ties with the EU have infuriated pro-brexit Conservati­ves, who are demanding May’s resignatio­n.

“We have to make a change,” former Conservati­ve leader Iain Duncan Smith told LBC radio. “The message was loud and clear that, since March 29, people have decided they are absolutely furious with the political class.”

Labour Party politician­s are wary about making a deal that could be seen as helping the archrival Conservati­ves deliver Brexit. Many party members and lawmakers want Labour to support a new, second referendum on Britain’s EU membership that could reverse voters’ 2016 decision to leave.

They point to big gains in the local elections for the anti-brexit Liberal Democrats and Green Party as evidence the public would welcome a second referendum.

Labour economy spokesman John Mcdonnell said the party would “come to an agreement if we can” with the Conservati­ves.

But he also said the governing party could not be trusted, after details of the negotiatio­ns appeared in the press.

Asked on BBC television if he trusted May, Mcdonnell said: “No, sorry, not after this weekend when she’s blown the confidenti­ality” of the talks.

He said Labour would only agree to a Brexit deal that included a permanent customs union with the EU to avoid barriers to trade. The government wants a looser relationsh­ip with the bloc that would let Britain strike new trade deals around the world.

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Theresa May

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