Brexit: Another crunch vote
in parliament
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| An anti-Brexit placard ia seen outside the Houses of Parliament in London |
The future of Britain’s exit from the European Union hung in
the balance Tuesday as lawmakers prepared to vote on Prime Minister Teresa
May’s Brexit deal after she won last-minute assurances from the EU. But, the
chances are not looking good for May after her Attorney General warned that
Britain could still be trapped in the Irish backstop provision despite the
latest amendments.
By Susy Hodges
Prime Minister May faces a day of reckoning with another
crunch vote in parliament on her EU withdrawal or Brexit deal.
The last time her Brexit deal was put to the vote in
January, lawmakers rejected it by a massive 230 vote margin in the biggest ever
defeat for a sitting government in parliament.
May has urged lawmakers to accept her revised deal, saying she had secured last-minute legal changes during her talks with EU leaders in Strasbourg aimed at addressing concern over the contentious Irish backstop provision in her Brexit deal. This is the insurance policy designed to avoid a hard border in Ireland whatever happens and it’s deeply unpopular with pro-Brexit lawmakers and with the Northern Irish Democratic Unionist party which props up May’s minority government.
May has urged lawmakers to accept her revised deal, saying she had secured last-minute legal changes during her talks with EU leaders in Strasbourg aimed at addressing concern over the contentious Irish backstop provision in her Brexit deal. This is the insurance policy designed to avoid a hard border in Ireland whatever happens and it’s deeply unpopular with pro-Brexit lawmakers and with the Northern Irish Democratic Unionist party which props up May’s minority government.
But just hours away from the vote, May’s chances of winning
it were dealt a massive blow when the Attorney General Geoffrey Cox said the
Prime Minister’s revised deal had not changed the legal risk of Britain being
trapped indefinitely in the Irish backstop if intractable differences arose. He
told parliament the Prime Minister’s last-minute amendments to her deal had
reduced that risk but warned it could still happen.
[ Audio Embed Listen to Susy Hodges' report]
Cox’s legal advice was seen as crucial to winning over the
Brexiteers in the ruling conservative party. Earlier the opposition Labour
Party said the Prime Minister had secured nothing new during her talks in
Strasbourg and said they would vote against her revised deal.
If lawmakers once again reject May’s deal, she has promised
them a vote on Wednesday on whether to leave without a deal. If they reject
that, then there will a vote on Thursday on whether to ask for a limited delay
to Brexit.
All this comes just over two weeks before Britain is due to
leave the EU and there is a widespread view that lawmakers will vote to reject
her deal despite these 11-hour amendments. As one British newspaper put it,
this vote represents May’s last roll of the dice. The outcome of it will not
just help determine the future shape of Britain’s relationship with the EU but
could also -- in the view of some -- determine the future of May’s own
leadership.

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