Miami Herald

May’s new Brexit plan looks a lot like the old one

- BY JILL LAWLESS AND RAF CASERT Associated Press

British Prime Minister Theresa May unveiled her Brexit Plan B on Monday — and it looks a lot like Plan A.

May launched a mission to resuscitat­e her rejected European Union divorce deal, setting out plans to get it approved by Parliament after securing changes from the EU to a contentiou­s Irish border measure.

May’s opponents expressed incredulit­y: British lawmakers last week dealt the deal a resounding defeat, and EU leaders insist they won’t renegotiat­e it.

Opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn of the Labour Party accused May of being in “deep denial” about her doomed deal.

“This really does feel a bit like ‘Groundhog Day,’ ” he said, referring to the 1993 film, in which a weatherman is fated to live out the same day over and over again.

Outlining what she plans to do after her EU divorce deal was rejected by Parliament last week, May said that she had heeded lawmakers’ concerns over an insurance policy known as the “backstop” that is intended to guarantee there are no customs checks along the border between EU member Ireland and the U.K.’s Northern Ireland after Brexit.

May told the House of Commons that she would be “talking further this week to colleagues … to consider how we might meet our obligation­s to the people of Northern Ireland and Ireland in a way that can command the greatest possible support in the House.

“And I will then take the conclusion­s of those discussion­s back to the EU.”

The bloc insists that it won’t renegotiat­e the withdrawal agreement.

“She is wasting time calling for a revision or clarificat­ion over the backstop,” said German politician Udo Bullmann, head of the socialist group in the European Parliament.

While May stuck doggedly to her deal, she also acknowledg­ed that control over Brexit wasn’t entirely in her hands. She noted that lawmakers will be able to amend her plan when it comes to a vote in the House of Commons on Jan. 29, exactly two months before Britain is due to leave the EU.

Groups of “soft Brexit”backing lawmakers — who want to keep close economic ties to the bloc — are planning to use amendments to try to rule out a “no-deal” Brexit and make May ease her insistence that leaving the EU means quitting its single market and customs union.

May’s immediate goal is to win over pro-Brexit Conservati­ves and her party’s Northern Irish ally, the Democratic Unionist Party.

 ?? MATT DUNHAM AP ?? A pro-Brexit supporter demonstrat­es with placards outside the Houses of Parliament in London on Monday.
MATT DUNHAM AP A pro-Brexit supporter demonstrat­es with placards outside the Houses of Parliament in London on Monday.
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