Britin's opposition leader puts
forward new plans for brexit
An anti-Brexit campaignery demonstrates outside Downing Street in London. |
British opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn today
moved a step closer to paving the way for another referendum on EU membership
by trying to use parliament to grab control of the Brexit process from Prime
Minister Theresa May.
By Susy Hodges
Labour put forward an amendment seeking to force the
government to give parliament time to consider and vote on options to prevent
Britain from crashing out of the EU with no deal. Those options include a
customs union with the EU and a public vote on a deal.
It was the first time the Labour leadership had put forward
in parliament the possibility of a second vote, which was welcomed by some
opponents of Brexit.
May is planning fresh talks with lawmakers aimed at tweaking
her defeated EU withdrawal plan but has refused to take a no-deal Brexit off
the table. In an address to parliament earlier this week the Prime
Minister again rejected calls for another referendum on Brexit or an extension
to the Article 50 withdrawal notice.
May says she is focusing on altering the so-called Northern
Ireland backstop, an insurance policy that is intended to ensure there will be
no return to border checks between the British province and Ireland.
Hardline supporters of Brexit in May’s Conservative party
strongly object to the backstop because Britain cannot unilaterally end the
provision which would keep it in a customs union with the EU until an
alternative way of ensuring an open border is found. Brussels says this
provision is non-negotiable.
The Prime Ministers’ Brexit withdrawal deal was defeated
last week by a massive 230 vote margin and the Irish backstop provision was a
key reason why so many lawmakers from her own party voted against the deal.
May has promised to be more flexible in her talks with
lawmakers to try to find a way out of the current deadlock but at the same time
she has refused to budge from her red lines.
The British parliament is deeply divided over Brexit, with
different factions supporting a wide range of options including leaving without
a deal, holding a second referendum and seeking a customs union with the EU.
One positive move announced by May ..that was widely
welcomed … was the government’s decision to scrap the planned fee for EU
nationals living in the UK to apply for settled status after Brexit.
But as the clock ticks down to Britain’s scheduled departure
from the EU on March the 29ththere is the growing chance of a
dramatic no-deal exit with no provisions to soften the economic shock.
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