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Davis urges cabinet to make May change mind

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LONDON: Critics of Theresa May’s plans for leaving the European Union stepped up the pressure on the British prime minister on Sunday, with one former minister saying her cabinet team should exert its authority to force her to change course.


With less than six months until Brexit day and with May due in Brussels for a summit on Wednesday, both sides are holding intensive talks to try to seal an agreement on the terms of Britain’s divorce.


Brexit minister Dominic Raab was due to meet the EU’s chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, in Brussels later on Sunday, after his department said it was “jointly agreed that face-to-face talks were necessary” on the “big issues still to resolve.”


One major issue was on a “backstop” to prevent a hard border with EU member Ireland, an arrangement that has strengthened opposition to May’s plans after her Northern Irish partners accused the bloc of trying to annex the province.


Former Brexit minister David Davis, who resigned his post in July, criticised the government for accepting “the EU’s language on dealing with the Northern Ireland border” and said it was now up to senior ministers to use their influence.


“This is one of the most fundamental decisions that government has taken in modern times. It is time for cabinet members to exert their collective authority,” wrote Davis, who campaigned for Britain to leave the EU in the 2016 referendum.


“This week the authority of our constitution is on the line,” he said in an article in the Sunday Times. Davis also pressed May to abandon her proposal for leaving the EU, saying the bloc “has rejected it. The public does not like it. Parliament will not vote for it”.


So far, May has shown little appetite to change tack in her strategy to leave the EU, pressing her plan and trying to persuade lawmakers in her Conservative Party and in opposition Labour to vote for any deal based on it in parliament.


May’s plan proposes Britain staying in a free trade zone with the EU for manufactured and agricultural goods.


Lobbying of May from all sides of the Brexit debate has increased in recent weeks as London and Brussels edge closer to an agreement on a draft withdrawal treaty to cover the divorce terms, a transition period and a solution for Northern Ireland.


Preventing any return of a hard border between the British province and EU member Ireland has become one of the major obstacles to such an agreement, with Brexit campaigners fearful that a non time-limited backstop will keep Britain inside a customs union with the bloc indefinitely. May insists any customs arrangement as part of the backstop must be temporary, but the EU has refused to set an end date.


Health minister Matt Hancock suggested the backstop could be temporary without such a date, an argument that may fall flat for some eurosceptic lawmakers who are calling for May to “chuck Chequers”, her Brexit plan named after her country residence.


“There are different ways to ensure that something is time limited. There are different ways of doing that. For instance, you can set conditions at the point at which the arrangements come to an end,” Hancock told the BBC.


Even if May reaches agreement with the Brussels on a withdrawal agreement, she will face a struggle to get any deal through parliament and may even find opposition


from her Northern Irish partners


to other legislation such as the


budget. — Reuters


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