British PM holds crisis
Brexit meeting
EU supporters participate in the 'People 's Vote' march in central London |
Senior Conservative Party figures have urged Theresa May to
recognize her political defeats and leave the prime minister’s post. However,
there was no indication from Downing Street that the British prime minister was
planning to step down.
By Stefan Bos
Some of her party’s principal supporters of a “hard” Brexit
that would see Britain leave the European Union even without a withdrawal deal
in place planned to meet with May on Sunday at the prime minister’s country
residence.
May thus far has been unable to generate enough support in
Parliament for the deal her government and the EU reached late last year.
Lawmakers voted down the Brexit plan twice, and May has
raised the possibility of bringing it back a third time if enough legislators
appear willing to switch their votes.
But it also comes amid signs that a growing number of
British people do no longer support Brexit, even those voting yes in the
referendum that sparked Britain's departure.
Anti-Brexit protesters flooded into central London by the
hundreds of thousands on Saturday, demanding that Britain’s Conservative-led
government hold a new referendum on whether Britain should leave the EU.
The “People’s Vote March” snaked from Park Lane and other
locations to converge on the British Parliament, where the fate of Brexit will
be decided in the coming weeks.
European Union Flags
Marchers carried European Union flags and signs praising the
longstanding ties between Britain and continental Europe. The protest drew
people from across Britain determined to force Prime Minister May’s government
to alter its march toward Brexit. "The country is in a mess, brought on by
our government, their incompetence," a protester said.
So far May remains determined to what she says is fulfilling
the wishes of those who voted for Brexit in a referendum in 2016.
And Treasury chief Philip Hammond said Sunday that senior
party members plotting to remove May were being “self-indulgent” as, in his
view, a change of leadership would not provide a solution to Britain's
political deadlock on Brexit.
But if May is unable to rally support for the withdrawal
agreement among British legislators, European leaders have warned that Britain
only has until April 12 to choose between leaving the EU without a divorce deal
or a radically new path, such as revoking the decision to leave the bloc or
calling another voter a referendum on Brexit.
Parliament may take a series of votes this week to determine
what proposals, if any, could receive majority support.
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