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View Full Version : Theresa May rules out People’s vote as she faces Brexit defeat and MPs turn on her



Teh One Who Knocks
11-15-2018, 12:16 PM
Richard Hartley-Parkinson for Metro.co.uk


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Esther McVey quit with an angry resignation letter this morning

Theresa May is facing a Brexit defeat after presenting her plan to MPs in the House of Commons this morning.

The Prime Minister has refused to rule out a People’s Vote – essentially a second referendum – despite having very little support in the House of Commons.

Before appearing at the dispatch box, two Leave-backing ministers including the man in charge of the UK’s withdrawal negotiations sensationally quit the Cabinet in a massive blow to May’s Brexit plans.

Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab – who only took over in the summer after David Davis resigned in protest over the Prime Minister’s withdrawal strategy – said he ‘cannot in good conscience support the terms proposed for our deal with the EU’.

Esther McVey announced she was resigning as Work and Pensions Secretary as she could not defend a deal which meant the UK ‘handing over control to the EU’.

Setting out details of the arrangements for a possible ‘backstop’, Mrs May told MPs: ‘I do not pretend that this has been a comfortable process, or that either we or the EU are entirely happy with some of the arrangements which have been included in it.

‘But of course this is the case. This is an arrangement that we have both said we never want to have to use.

‘But while some people might pretend otherwise, there is no deal which delivers the Brexit the British people voted for which does not involve this insurance policy – not Canada-plus-plus-plus, not Norway-for-now, not our own White Paper.

‘The EU will not negotiate any future partnership without it.’

The pair’s shock departures within little more than an hour of one another on Thursday came amid a furious backlash from Brexit-backing Tories to the deal given the collective approval of Mrs May’s Cabinet in a stormy five-hour meeting at 10 Downing Street on Wednesday.

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Dominic Raab quit as Brexit secretary moments before Theresa May appeared before MPs

Their resignations were followed by a second Brexit minister, Suella Braverman, while Anne-Marie Trevelyan announced she was quitting as an unpaid parliamentary aide in the Department for Education.

The developments threaten to derail the Prime Minister’s Brexit strategy ahead of a crucial EU summit on November 25, with just over four months to go until the UK is due to leave on March 29.

They came shortly before Mrs May was due to set out the details of the withdrawal agreement to MPs in the House of Commons, in what is expected to be a bruising clash with some of her fiercest critics.

Jacob Rees-Mogg wrote to Conservative MPs calling on them not to support Mrs May’s plan, arguing the UK would ‘hand over £39 billion to the EU for little or nothing in return’.

The deal is ‘unacceptable to unionists’, will ‘lock us into an EU customs union and EU laws’ and is ‘profoundly undemocratic’, Mr Rees-Mogg said.

He added: ‘Should I not write to the member for Altrincham and Sale West?’ (Graham Brady, chairman of the Tory 1922 committee)

Labour said the Government was ‘falling apart before our eyes’ and the pound dropped sharply after Mr Raab’s resignation.

Earlier, Shailesh Vara quit as minister of state for Northern Ireland, saying Mrs May’s agreement, ‘leaves the UK in a halfway house with no time limit on when we will finally be a sovereign nation’.

In his letter to the Prime Minister, Mr Raab said the deal represented a ‘very real threat to the integrity of the United Kingdom’ because of provisions for Northern Ireland.

He also said he could not accept ‘an indefinite backstop arrangement’ for the Irish border.

He said: ‘No democratic nation has ever signed up to be bound by such an extensive regime, imposed externally without any democratic control over the laws to be applied, nor the ability to decide to exit the arrangement.’

Ms McVey, who was promoted to the Cabinet by Mrs May in January, was reported to have been close to tears as she tried to force a vote on the Brexit deal in Wednesday’s Cabinet.

In a letter to the PM, the Tatton MP cited concerns over the future of the Union and a lack of control over money, law, borders and trade policy under a deal she felt kept the UK too close to Brussels.‘The British people have always been ahead of politicians on this issue, and it will be no good trying to pretend to them that this deal honours the result of the referendum when it is obvious to everyone that it doesn’t,’ wrote Ms McVey.

‘We have gone from no deal is better than a bad deal, to any deal is better than no deal.

‘I cannot defend this, and I cannot vote for this deal. I could not look my constituents in the eye were I to do that.’

The resignations came as European Council president Donald Tusk announced an extraordinary meeting of EU leaders in Brussels on November 25, at which the withdrawal agreement and a political declaration on future relations is due to be finalised and formalised.

Westminster is braced for further resignations, amid widespread expectations that the Prime Minister may face a challenge to her position from Conservative MPs submitting letters of no confidence in her leadership.
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Mr Raab had been a surprise choice as Brexit Secretary when Mr Davis, along with foreign secretary Boris Johnson and Brexit minister Steve Baker, resigned in protest at Mrs May’s Chequers plan in July.

As the UK’s ministerial point man in negotiations he made repeated trips to Brussels for talks with EU negotiator Michel Barnier as he and civil servants tried to hammer out a workable withdrawal agreement.

The pound fell heavily against most major currencies after his resignation. Sterling dropped 1.1 per cent to $1.28 and was 1.2 per cent lower at €1.13.

Shadow Cabinet Office minister Jon Trickett said the Government was ‘falling apart before our eyes as, for a second time, the Brexit Secretary has refused to back the Prime Minister’s Brexit plan’.

‘This is the 20th minister to resign from Theresa May’s Government in her two-year premiership,’ he said.

‘Theresa May has no authority left and is clearly incapable of delivering a Brexit deal that commands even the support of her Cabinet, let alone Parliament and the people of our country.’

Remain-supporting Tory MP Anna Soubry added on Twitter that Mr Raab’s resignation ‘marks the end of PMs Withdrawal Agreement’ and possibly her premiership.

Ms Soubry added: ‘No PM deserves to be so badly treated. Raab signed up to her Withdrawal Agreement allowing her to make her statement after Cabinet knowing he’d resign in time for the 9am News bulletins the next morning. Shameful.’

Mrs May faces a battle to get the deal through Parliament as pro-Leave Conservative MPs – as well as some Remainers – lined up to condemn the plan, accusing her of breaking promises and leaving the UK at the mercy of Brussels.

In a resignation statement, North-West Cambridgeshire MP Mr Vara – who was promoted by Mrs May as recently as July – said: ‘We are a proud nation and it is a sad day when we are reduced to obeying rules made by other countries who have shown that they do not have our best interests at heart.

‘We can and must do better than this. The people of the UK deserve better.’

Mr Vara, a former Conservative vice chairman who has served as a whip and on the front benches for the bulk of his career since entering Parliament in 2005, backed Remain in the 2016 referendum.

In Brussels, Mr Tusk was handed a copy of the 585-page withdrawal agreement by EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier.

Ministers and ambassadors of the remaining 27 EU states will work to finalise by next Tuesday the political declaration on future relations with the UK, published in outline form on Wednesday, he said.

Welcoming the UK Cabinet’s collective agreement to accept the withdrawal document, Mr Tusk said: ‘Of course, I do not share the Prime Minister’s enthusiasm about Brexit as such.

‘Since the very beginning, we have had no doubt that Brexit is a lose-lose situation and our negotiations are only about damage control.’

He sent a message to the British people: ‘As much as I am sad to see you leave, I will do everything to make this farewell the least painful possible, both for you and for us.’