UK Parliament to vote on
Brexit amendments
British PM May at Westminster. |
British lawmakers were voting Tuesday on a series of
amendments to Prime Minister Teresa May’s EU withdrawal deal that could shape
the future direction of the Brexit process. The amendments included a proposed
delay to Brexit and asking the government to go back to the EU to demand
changes to the Northern Irish backstop. The crucial votes come exactly two
months before Britain is due to leave the European Union (EU) on March 29th.
By Suzy Hodges
With Britain’s departure date from the EU looming closer,
the nation remains locked in its deepest political crisis in decades, with no
agreement on how, or even whether it should leave the EU.
After May’s Brexit deal was heavily defeated in parliament
earlier this month, government and opposition lawmakers have been searching for
a way out of the crisis.
The Prime Minister is trying to use these series of votes in
parliament to find a consensus that lawmakers in her own party could support.
The main sticking point in May’s deal for many Brexiteers is
the Northern Irish backstop provision that is intended to ensure there will be
no return to a hard border in Ireland. But the Irish government and the
European Commission both repeated this week that the backstop provision in the
deal is not open for re-negotiation.
Meanwhile, as the Brexit crisis goes down to the line, UK
grocers and fast food outlets have warned that a no-deal Brexit could lead to
major disruption and empty shelves in supermarkets.
In a letter to lawmakers they warned that crashing out of the EU without a deal threatens the UK’s food security and also will lead to higher prices in the short term.
In a letter to lawmakers they warned that crashing out of the EU without a deal threatens the UK’s food security and also will lead to higher prices in the short term.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét