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Britain's PM May could face another Brexit defeat in parliament

Europe Materials 14 February 2019 14:03 (UTC +04:00)
British Prime Minister Theresa May could face a defeat in parliament on Thursday over her plan to renegotiate the Brexit deal, undermining her pledge to the European Union that, with changes, she can get the agreement approved
Britain's PM May could face another Brexit defeat in parliament

British Prime Minister Theresa May could face a defeat in parliament on Thursday over her plan to renegotiate the Brexit deal, undermining her pledge to the European Union that, with changes, she can get the agreement approved, Trend reports referring to Reuters.

Thursday’s symbolic vote was seen by May’s team as little more than a rubber stamp of her plan to secure changes to the divorce deal with the EU, giving her more time to satisfy lawmakers’ concerns over one part of it - the Irish backstop.

But hardline Brexit supporters in her governing Conservative Party are angry over what they say is her acceptance of ruling out a no-deal departure - something May and her team deny, saying by law if there is no deal, Britain will leave the EU on March 29 without an agreement.

The latest twist in the two-year negotiation to leave the EU underlines the deep divisions in parliament over how, or even whether, Britain should leave the bloc in the country’s biggest political and trade shift in more than 40 years.

A rebellion, even in a symbolic vote, would be a blow to May, who has insisted to EU leaders that if they offer her more concessions to the deal agreed in November, she can command a majority in parliament and get the agreement passed.

Trade minister Liam Fox urged lawmakers to back the prime minister, warning: “Our European partners will be watching”.

One Conservative lawmaker said a group of Brexit supporters in the party, the European Research Group, was discussing which strategy to pursue on Thursday - to vote against or to abstain.

May is trying to secure changes to the so-called backstop arrangement to prevent a return of border controls between Northern Ireland and EU-member Ireland to ease concerns that Britain will be kept too closely in the EU’s orbit indefinitely or that the British province will be split away.

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