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May pulls parliamentary vote on her Brexit deal

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LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May abruptly decided on Monday to pull a parliamentary vote on her Brexit deal, throwing Britain’s plan to leave the European Union up in the air on the eve of the vote after repeated warnings from members of parliament she faced a rout.


While there was no immediate official announcement, a source in Whitehall, the centre of British power, said the vote would be delayed, a decision the government could take without having to get the approval of parliament.


The move thrusts the United Kingdom’s divorce from the European Union into chaos, with possible options including a disorderly Brexit with no deal, another referendum on EU membership, or a last minute renegotiation of May’s deal.


May’s own position could face a swift challenge. Main opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said the United Kingdom no longer had “a functioning government”.


A small Northern Irish party which props up May’s Conservative minority government called the situation a shambles. Scottish nationalists pledged to support a vote to bring the government down.


Corbyn said: “The government has decided Theresa May’s Brexit deal is so disastrous that it has taken the desperate step of delaying its own vote at the eleventh hour.”


Sterling GBP=D3 skidded to its weakest level since June, 2017, falling to $1.2622.


The decision to halt the vote came just hours after the EU’s top court ruled that Britain could unilaterally withdraw its decision to leave the bloc on March, 29.




MORE TALKS?


May’s government called that ruling meaningless because Britain has no intention of halting Brexit. But critics of her plans said the ruling opens options, including delaying the exit for more talks, or calling it off if voters change their minds.


After repeated warnings that the December 11 vote in parliament would humiliate her government as opponents and supporters of Brexit joined in opposition to her deal, May convened a conference call with senior ministers on Monday.


She was due to give a statement to parliament on “Exiting the EU.” Afterwards, the leader of the House of Commons, Andrea Leadsom, who organises business in parliament on the government’s behalf, was due to speak.


If May stays in power, she could seek to get a better deal from the EU at a summit on December 13-14, in the hope of putting it before parliament at a later date.


EU diplomats and officials said the part of the deal that is most contentious in Britain - a “backstop” to ensure no hard land border between British-ruled Northern Ireland and the EU-member Irish Republic — must remain in place. May’s opponents say the backstop could leave Britain subject indefinitely to EU rules, long after it gives up say in drafting them.


“Extremely hard to imagine any watering down of the backstop,” an EU diplomat dealing with Brexit said.




BREXIT REVERSED?


Just hours before May decided to cancel the vote, the EU court ruled that Britain could cancel its official Article 50 notice to leave the bloc without permission from the other EU members and without losing any special privileges. — Reuters



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