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Fury Over UK PM Theresa May Postponing Vote on Brexit Deal

May’s decision to delay the vote on her deal increases chances that MPs will move to delay Brexit beyond 29 March.

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Prime Minister Theresa May sparked outrage Sunday, 24 February, by suggesting parliament may not be able to vote on her Brexit deal until 12 March, just days before Britain leaves the EU.

The decision increases the chances that MPs will move next week to delay Brexit beyond 29 March, to avoid a potentially disastrous situation where Britain exits with no agreement at all.

May had held out the possibility of a vote this week, but on Sunday she said she was still discussing with the EU possible amendments to the deal’s arrangements for the Irish border.

"As we're continuing with those talks, we won't bring a meaningful vote to parliament this week," she told reporters as she arrived at a summit of European and Arab leaders in Egypt.

"But that will happen by 12 March. And we still have it within our grasp to leave the European Union with a deal on 29 March."

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Since MPs rejected her withdrawal deal last month, May has sought to address their concerns about the text's "backstop" arrangement, which is designed to keep the border with Ireland free flowing.

She is meeting with European Council chief Donald Tusk and German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the two-day summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, and her team will also return to Brussels on Tuesday.

But opposition politicians and pro-European MPs in London reacted with fury at what they believe is a deliberate strategy of delay.

Labour's Brexit spokesman Keir Starmer said her move not to hold a vote this week was "the height of irresponsibility and an admission of failure".

“Theresa May is recklessly running down the clock in a desperate attempt to force MPs to choose between her deal and no deal. Parliament cannot stand by and allow this to happen.”
Keir Starmer.

May has refused to rule out leaving the EU with no deal, despite the risk of huge economic disruption on both sides of the Channel.

She says the only way to avoid this scenario is to support her deal -- but growing numbers of MPs believe that Brexit should instead be delayed.

Three of her cabinet ministers on Saturday warned in a newspaper article that if there was no breakthrough this week then the House of Commons would vote for a delay.

"Beyond the next few days, there simply will not be time to agree a deal and complete all the necessary legislation before March 29," they wrote.

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May has promised to make a statement in the Commons on Tuesday and allow MPs on Wednesday to debate their own ideas for the way forward.

Labour MP Yvette Cooper urged lawmakers to support her cross-party proposal to delay Brexit, saying: “How are businesses, public services and families supposed to plan in this chaos?”

Sam Gyimah, who quit as a junior minister in May's government over her approach to Brexit, said her latest decision was "shocking".

"We've run out of road. The meaningful vote can is now being kicked against the wall," he tweeted.

After rejecting the EU withdrawal deal that May spent almost two years negotiating, MPs demanded she return seek changes to the Irish backstop.

This plan would keep Britain in a customs union with the EU after Brexit if and until another way – for example, a free trade deal – were found to keep open the border with Ireland.

The EU has said it will not reopen the text, but is looking at what "guarantees" could be given to reassure MPs that the backstop would be temporary.

Earlier, Environment Secretary Michael Gove said the government was still discussing various options.

"It could be a time limit, it could be a unilateral exit mechanism," he told the BBC -- citing two options Brussels has publicly rejected.

He added: "And it could be another legally powerful protocol or addition to the treaty that makes it clear that we would not be bound in the backstop indefinitely against our will."

(In an arrangement with PTI)

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Topics:  Ireland   Brexit   Theresa May 

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