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Brexit: MPs hold Theresa May to vow over delaying leave

British MPs have backed Theresa May’s revised plan for leaving the European Union, raising the possibility of delaying Brexit.

A projection calling for a second referendum is cast onto the Houses of Parliament in London. Picture: AP.
A projection calling for a second referendum is cast onto the Houses of Parliament in London. Picture: AP.

British MPs agreed yesterday to give Prime Minister Theresa May more time to work on her EU withdrawal deal after she promised they could delay Brexit if necessary, but Euro­pean leaders warned that any postponement would come with conditions.

MPs voted by 502 to 20 to endorse­ Mrs May’s plan, a radica­l shift in strategy made only after the threat of revolt by ministers, who fear Britain crashing out of the EU on March 29 without a deal. The vote was a symbolic move designed to ensure­ the government doesn’t try to wriggle out of the promise.

Mrs May is still seeking changes to a withdrawal agreement struck with the EU late last year, which she hopes will be enough to get it through the House of Commons.

But if she fails she has promised MPs votes on March 13 and March 14 on whether to leave the bloc without a deal and, if not, to seek a short delay.

“The government’s policy is to get the legally binding changes so a deal can be brought back to this house … and we can leave on March 29 with a deal,” Mrs May said.

Any delay must be approved by the other 27 EU member states, and the bloc’s leaders have agreed to look at any reques­t from Britain.

But some questioned what it would achieve without a breakthrough in London, where MPs still cannot agree how to impleme­nt the result of the June 2016 Brexit referendum.

“We don’t need more time: what we need most of all is a decis­ion,” said French President Emmanuel Macron after meeting German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Paris.

In Madrid, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said: “Although Spain will not oppose granting a possible extension, this must have an assured perspective of resolution.”

Mrs May had repeatedly ruled out delaying Brexit, even after her deal — covering citizens’ rights, the financial settlement, a transition period and plans for the Irish border — was overwhelmingly rejected by MPs yesterday. Her U-turn on Wednesday prompted outrage among hardliners in the ruling Conservative Party, with anti-EU MP Jacob Rees-Mogg warning that “any delay to Brexit is a plot to stop Brexit”.

Twenty Conservatives rebelled against the Prime Minister during the main vote yesterday, while many others abstaine­d. However, Mrs May’s change of plan averted a ­rebellion by pro-Europeans who fear economic chaos if Britain ends its 46-year relationship with the EU without a deal.

In a rare moment of unity, MPs moved yesterday to protect the rights of 3.6 million Euro­peans living in Britain and one million Britons in the EU in case of a “no deal”.

They backed without a vote an amendment urging the government to try to preserve the expat rights set out in the divorce agreement, whatever happens.

Mrs May’s government has already vowed to protect the rights of those in Britain but agreed to try to encourage a joint EU approach.

Opposition to the Brexit deal, agreed in November after almost two years of negotiations between­ London and Brussels, is focused on the so-called backstop plan to avoid checks on the Irish border. Mrs May is seeking legal guarantees of the temporary nature of the arrangement, which Conservative MPs fear would keep Britain in the EU’s customs union indefinitely.

The Labour Party wants a new customs union with the bloc after Brexit, but its plan was defeate­d by 323 to 240 yesterday.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn­ dramatically shifted his own position on Brexit this week by opening the door to backing a second referendum.

After yesterday’s defeat, he said: “We will back a public vote in order to prevent a damaging Tory Brexit or a disastrous no-deal outcome.”

But he said Labour would also “continue to push for the other available options to prevent those outcomes, including a close economic relationship based on our credible alternative plan or a general election”.

MPs also voted down 324 votes to 288 a Scottish National Party motion to avoid “no deal”.

AFP

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/brexit-mps-hold-theresa-may-to-vow-over-delaying-leave/news-story/05204d2fd735523a378ebb134314d26a