May urges to save her Brexit deal
May today urged MPs to back her Brexit deal, saying it is the only way to honour the referendum result and protect the economy.
Prime Minister Theresa May said on Sunday that Britain would be in uncharted territory if her Brexit deal is rejected by parliament later this month, despite little sign that she has won over skeptical lawmakers.
Britain is due to leave the European Union on March 29 but May’s inability so far to get her deal for a managed exit through parliament has alarmed business leaders and investors who fear the country is heading for a damaging no-deal Brexit.
May said the vote in parliament would be around Jan. 15, as expected, contrary to reports she could delay it.
Senior Tories tell Theresa May to work with Jeremy Corbyn as only hope to save herBrexit deal.
Theresa May is banking on the EU to save her deal – but a distracted Europe has many angles to it.
Writing in the Mail, Ms May said, her critics both Remainers and Brexiteers risk damaging democracy if they oppose her plan. But a poll carried out for the People’s Vote campaign suggests fewer than one in four voters support her Brexit deal.
MPs are due to vote on whether to back Mrs May’s Brexit plan next week.
A deal on the terms of the UK’s exit and the framework of future relations has been agreed between the Prime Minister and the European Union – but it needs to pass a vote by MPs in Parliament before it is accepted.
The UK is due to leave the EU on 29th March this year – regardless of whether there is a deal or not.
May has already delayed the vote once, in December, when it became clear she would lose unless extra reassurances from the EU were agreed.
Describing what would happen if she was defeated, May told the BBC: “We’re going to be in uncharted territory. I don’t think anybody can say exactly what will happen in terms of the reaction we’ll see in parliament.”
Amid the uncertainty over Britain’s next steps – which range from leaving without a deal to not leaving at all – a poll showed more Britons want to remain a member of the EU than leave, and voters want to make the final decision themselves.
May’s party itself is divided over her deal, with many fearing that an insurance policy designed to avoid the re-emergence of a hard border between Ireland and Northern Ireland could leave Britain subject to EU rules indefinitely.
One of those leading that opposition, lawmaker Jacob Rees-Mogg, said in a newspaper article that it was “wishful thinking” that time away from parliament over the Christmas holiday could persuade him to change his mind and back the deal.
The Northern Irish party that props up May’s minority government called on her to stand firm in demanding that the EU changes its “poison” backstop provision on Ireland’s post-Brexit border.
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