Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Seeking Brexit support, May proposes new referendum

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LONDON — In a major concession, British Prime Minister Theresa May on Tuesday offered U.K. lawmakers the chance to vote on whether to hold a new referendum on the country’s membership in the European Union — but only if they back her thrice-rejected Brexit agreement.

May made the offer as part of a desperate attempt to persuade Parliament to back a divorce deal that will allow the U.K. to make an orderly, if delayed, departure from the EU.

She plans to ask the House of Commons to vote in early June on a withdrawal agreement bill, in what May called a “last chance” to seal a Brexit deal. Soon after that vote, she will give a timetable for her departure as Conservati­ve leader and prime minister.

In a speech Tuesday, May said the bill would include “a requiremen­t to vote on whether to hold a second referendum” that would give Britons a chance to approve or reject the terms of Brexit. A referendum is a key demand of opposition lawmakers who have until now rejected May’s deal.

“I do not believe that this is a route we should take,” said May, who has long opposed a new public vote on Brexit. “But I recognize the genuine and sincere strength of feeling across the House on this ... issue.”

The Brexit referendum, however, will only happen if Parliament backs the EU withdrawal bill and it becomes law, something that still seems unlikely, despite May’s last-minute changes.

Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the main opposition Labour Party, said May’s new bill was merely “a repackagin­g of the same old bad deal, rejected three times by Parliament.”

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