Lawmakers urge May to heed them on alternative Brexit plans

Lawmakers urge May to heed them on alternative Brexit plans

by Joseph Anthony
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EU supporters, calling on the government to give Britons a vote on the final Brexit deal, lead a cart with an effigy of Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May as they participate in the ‘People’s Vote’ march in central London

British lawmakers called on Prime Minister Theresa May on Tuesday to heed whatever alternative Brexit strategy they can settle on after they attempted to break the impasse by grabbing control of the process in parliament.


The government insisted the deal May agreed with the European Union in November after more than two years of negotiation remained the only way forward for taking Britain out of the bloc. That deal has been voted down twice in parliament.

May hopes lawmakers who want an abrupt no-deal Brexit will now fall in behind her or risk seeing a long delay which could end up with Britain remaining closer to the EU or not leaving at all.

In the latest twist in Britainโ€™s Brexit drama, lawmakers on Monday wrested control of parliamentary time in order to vote on a range of Brexit options on Wednesday. Three junior ministers resigned in order to defy the government line.

May responded by saying her government would not be bound by the results of the so-called indicative votes.

But lawmakers said the government should listen.


โ€œIf parliament is able to come up with a way forward, the question is whether the government is prepared to compromise,โ€ Hilary Benn, an opposition lawmaker who chairs a parliament committee on Brexit, said.

Benn conceded that the government could ignore the indicative votes and press on with Mayโ€™s plan.

โ€œThat is indeed possible, but it is not an argument for not trying because we are in a complete mess. The government is in chaos,โ€ he said.

Possible options to be considered include Mayโ€™s deal, a no-deal Brexit, another referendum, revoking the Article 50 divorce process, a free trade agreement with a customs union, and staying in the EUโ€™s single market.

Steve Brine, a lawmaker from Mayโ€™s Conservative Party who quit as a junior health minister on Monday, said parliament might be able to break the deadlock.


โ€œThe bottom line is that something has got to change,โ€ he said. โ€œWe are stuck in this maddening impasse where we go round and round in circles, something has to move us forward. The House of Commons is not going to come up with something completely crazy.โ€

โ€œPLAYING WITH FIREโ€

Health Minister Matt Hancock said Mayโ€™s deal remained the only option on the table and ousting the prime minister would not help resolve the impasse.

May has not ruled out bringing back her deal for a third time this week, possibly on Thursday.

The Sun newspaper said May had suggested she could resign if that persuaded enough doubters in her party to back her deal.


โ€œChanging the party leader doesnโ€™t change anything. It doesnโ€™t change the arithmetic in parliament and also it would be a huge distraction,โ€ Hancock said.

Last week, the EU agreed to delay Britainโ€™s original March 29 departure date because of the deadlock. Now, it will leave the EU on May 22 if Mayโ€™s deal is approved this week. If not, it will have until April 12 to outline its plans.

Former Conservative minister Michael Heseltine said ignoring parliament would be dangerous for May.

โ€œI think she is playing with fire when she says she is not going to take any notice of what the House of Commons says,โ€ he told BBC radio.


โ€œThere is no doubt at all that public opinion is moving, quite significantly now, appalled at what has happened and the events that we see and apprehensive of the fact that we havenโ€™t even begun to negotiate the real deal.โ€

Nearly three years after Britons voted 52-48 per cent to leave in the 2016 EU membership referendum, and three days before Britain was supposed to leave the bloc, the outlook for Brexit remains up in the air.

Brexit minister Stephen Barclay said on Sunday if parliament took control of theBrexit process, a snap election, which the main opposition Labour Party would likely back, could follow.

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