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Home / World

UK Prime Minister Theresa May to quit - once the country has left the European Union

NZ Herald
27 Mar, 2019 05:31 PM13 mins to read

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      Boris Johnson, a longtime foe of British Prime Minister Theresa May's EU divorce deal, now plans to vote for it.

      Conservative MP Conor Burns, an ally of Johnson's, said the former foreign secretary told a meeting of pro-Brexit MPs that he would back the deal.

      The shift came soon after May told Conservative Party MPs that she will step down if her twice-rejected deal is approved and Britain leaves the European Union.

      Johnson is highly likely to be a contender in any Conservative leadership contest that follows May's departure.

      Johnson is among pro-Brexit MPs who have opposed the deal because they think it keeps Britain too closely tied to the bloc. In a newspaper column yesterday, he said the deal was a "constitutional humiliation".

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      Labour Party Brexit spokesman Keir Starmer tweeted: "I wonder what it is about the pending Tory leadership contest that made Boris change his mind?"

      May earlier told her Conservative Party MPs: "I have heard very clearly the mood of the parliamentary party. I know there is a desire for a new approach, and new leadership, in the second phase of the Brexit negotiations, and I won't stand in the way of that".

      "I am prepared to leave this job earlier than I intended in order to do what is right for our country and our party," she said.

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      Quitting after the deal passes would mean May would have achieved her objective of Brexit, but wouldn't then have to stay in control for the long negotiations with the EU over Britain's relationship with the bloc.

      The BBC's political editor Laura Kuenssberg commented on Twitter: "May becomes another Tory leader whose time in office is cut short by party's anguish and division over Europe".

      May has battled to keep the Conservative Party's pro-Brexit and pro-Remain factions together throughout the process. Her Government has also been reliant on support from the Northern Ireland DUP to maintain control.

      Critics were quick to note that May didn't offer a specific exit date.

      Discover more

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      27 Mar 06:02 PM
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      Comment: No, Brexit is not really about making Britain imperial again

      27 Mar 07:16 PM
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      27 Mar 08:18 PM
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      "If I were them, I'd want it in blood," Margaret Beckett, a Labour Party politician, told the BBC. "I've lost track of how many times she's promised she won't lead them into the next election and suddenly it's turned out that she might after all."

      The Prime Minister's announcement is seen as key to getting dozens of hard Brexiter lawmakers, including Boris Johnson and Jacob Rees-Mogg, to back her Brexit deal.

      After May's earlier promise of a tentative, slow-motion resignation, the Parliament was set to vote today on what kind of Brexit the fractious, quarrelling, paralysed MPs want.

      Theresa May's exit timetable looks something like this*:

      27th May: Leadership contest begins in earnest

      28th June: PM goes to G20 in Osaka, Japan, for her final international summit

      10th July: New Conservative leader is in place

      * All hinges on her deal going through...

      — Steven Swinford (@Steven_Swinford) March 27, 2019

      Even with May's bold move, it is possible their answer will be a mush.

      It is also possible that a way forward might emerge in a series of "indicative" votes for or against a "soft" or "hard" exit from the European Union.

      The Parliament may signal whether MPs want a political and trade relationship with Europe like Norway has - or whether Britain should go it alone.

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      MPs could also push for a second referendum to give voters another say on how, or whether, they want to leave the EU.

      Traditionally, the British Parliament has a brake but not a steering wheel. This week, though, MPs have seized control - for a couple days - of Britain's exit process.

      The votes that begin today will be nonbinding. May has said she is willing to hear what the lawmakers have to say, while at the same time she worries the votes will stoke a constitutional crisis. May's Government opposed the voting scheme but is too weak to stop it.

      The House of Commons has in the past three months said what it does not want. Lawmakers two times voted overwhelmingly against May's Brexit deal. They also said they do not want Britain to leave the continental trading bloc without a deal.

      Here is May’s full statement to the ‘22. “I have heard very clearly the mood of the party” pic.twitter.com/voQE3lo03D

      — Beth Rigby (@BethRigby) March 27, 2019

      Speaker John Bercow chose eight of 16 proposals submitted to proceed to a debate and a vote.

      Why 16 when you can have 17 options? asked the Twittersphere, which saw social media users on Wednesday coming up with amusing alternatives for how to break the deadlock, including "Bring in Judge Judy" and "Let the Queen decide."

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      Among the actual proposals brought forward is a Norway-style relationship with the EU. That would allow frictionless, tariff-free trade, but it might make Britain accept the free flow of European migrants - a major objection among those who voted to leave the EU.

      The opposition Labour Party, meanwhile, is pushing an "alternative customs union" Brexit plan.

      Other options include leaving the EU without a deal or canceling Brexit altogether.

      Labour MP Hilary Benn told the BBC that he wanted the Prime Minister "to look at what we might be able to agree on and say, 'OK, I'm prepared to move.' That is what good leadership is. Unfortunately there hasn't been any since this began."

      Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn told Parliament that May had a "very clear choice . . . either listen and change course - or go."

      She is "failing to deliver Brexit because she can't build a consensus, is unable to compromise and unable to reunite the country," he said.

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      Boris Johnson will now back the PM

      — Laura Kuenssberg (@bbclaurak) March 27, 2019

      A recent YouGov poll found that 31 per cent of the public preferred May as prime minister, 19 per cent said Corbyn, and 46 per cent were not sure.

      May has so far indicated that she is pressing on with the withdrawal deal she negotiated with EU leaders. She suggested that she could bring back her deal - dubbed MV3 - for a third time this week.

      But Bercow issued a fresh warning.

      The Commons Speaker said earlier this month that he would only allow another vote on the deal if it had been substantially changed since the last time it was rejected by MPs.

      Bercow today warned the Government he still expected that "test of change" to be met as he also cautioned ministers against trying to find a procedural loophole to get around his ruling.

      Downing Street had been targeting Saturday this week to potentially hold the third vote on the deal after a number of senior Tory Brexiteers appeared to soften their opposition to the Prime Minister's agreement.

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      So Downing Street source confirms that the leadership election will begin on 22 May, if MPs support the prime minister's deal in third meaningful vote and Brexit happens on that timetable. It is a commitment that there will be "new leadership for phase two" of negotiations...

      — Robert Peston (@Peston) March 27, 2019

      But Bercow told the House of Commons: "I understand that the Government may be thinking of bringing meaningful vote three before the House either tomorrow or even Friday if the House opts to sit that day.

      "Therefore in order that there should be no misunderstanding I wish to make clear that I do expect the Government to meet the test of change.

      "They should not seek to circumvent my ruling by means of tabling either a notwithstanding motion or a paving motion.

      "The table office has been instructed that no such motions shall be accepted."

      During lively Prime Minister's Questions, May told a fellow Conservative lawmaker who has voted twice against her deal: "We can guarantee delivering on Brexit if this week he and others in this House support the deal."

      On the other side of the English Channel, the Europeans wait and wait. Donald Tusk, President of the European Council, told legislators Wednesday in Brussels that the EU should be open to a long extension if Britain wanted to "rethink" its strategy.

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      "You cannot betray the six million people who signed a petition to revoke Article 50 - the 1 million people who marched for a people's vote or the increasing majority of people who want to remain in the European Union," Tusk said.

      Jacob Rees-Mogg: “There’s never any joy or happiness in someone’s political career coming to an end.”

      — Michael Savage (@michaelsavage) March 27, 2019

      Tusk was referring to the "Cancel Brexit" petition hosted on Parliament's website, alongside the mass demonstration staged Saturday in London - probably the biggest public demonstration in Britain in a century.

      Jacob Rees-Mogg, a Conservative MP and something of a power broker in these negotiations, said he would back May's deal as long as Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionists did. He tweeted that "half a loaf is better than no bread."

      Explaining the U-turn, he told the BBC that he changed his mind because the government has backed away from his preferred option, leaving without a deal, and May's deal at least delivered Brexit.

      Things may be confusing on the Conservative benches, but they aren't any clearer on the Labour ones.

      Speaking on BBC Radio 4, Labour MP Peter Kyle spoke about his preferred Brexit option, that any deal passed should be put to a public vote. He said that during the "indicative" voting, Corbyn "will order" the party's MPs to vote for this.

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      Labour MP Barry Gardiner didn't appear to get that memo. He told the same radio programme that option was "not where our policy has been" and that "the Labour Party is not a remain party - we have accepted the result of the referendum." His name was soon trending on social media.

      Like the Conservative Party, the Labour Party has been trying to walk a tightrope, appeasing both the "remainers" and "leavers" in their party. It did not go unnoticed at the massive on march Saturday - where an estimated 1 million took to the streets to demand a second referendum - that Labour sent its deputy leader to address the crowds but not its leader.

      - NZ Herald, Washington Post, Daily Telegraph, AP

      More to come

      So @SteveBakerHW just gave speech to Tory ERG Brexiters saying he could never back PM’s Brexit deal and he received standing ovation. Still seems unlikely @theresa_may will quite have the votes to get over the line

      — Robert Peston (@Peston) March 27, 2019

      Tory Brexiteer Jacob Rees-Mogg says Theresa May's promise to quit if MPs back her #Brexit deal shows her "inner nobility"https://t.co/7i403rdirp pic.twitter.com/u0ZMwkmw7E

      — BBC Politics (@BBCPolitics) March 27, 2019

      1922 exec source tells me... IF May’s deal passes this *might* be timing of leadership contest
      - Firing gun goes May 23
      - 2-3 wks hustings in HoC
      - 3-4 wks for candidates to get around the regions
      - handover at party conference

      — Beth Rigby (@BethRigby) March 27, 2019

      As Jacob Rees-Mogg and Boris Johnson hint they will vote for Theresa May's Brexit deal, James O'Brien looks back over what they've previously said about it.@mrjamesob | #Brexit pic.twitter.com/evLCGctCLl

      — LBC (@LBC) March 27, 2019

      Speaker Bercow has declared the voting period open and the House suspended for the next 30 mins

      — Jennifer McKiernan (@_JennyMcKiernan) March 27, 2019

      What the PM and Downing Street want tonight's narrative to be is that @theresa_may is laying down her political life for what she sees as the good of the country, namely seeing her form of Brexit implemented. The corollary is of course that the Tory Party would have to...

      — Robert Peston (@Peston) March 27, 2019

      Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn says Prime Minister Theresa May's pledge to stand down if her Brexit deal is passed "shows once and for all that her chaotic Brexit negotiations have been about party management, not principles or the public interest"

      — Sky News Breaking (@SkyNewsBreak) March 27, 2019

      On today's Commons debate and the weird glimpse it gave us into a world where someone other than Theresa May became PM: https://t.co/YcHICE1z05

      — Stephen Bush (@stephenkb) March 27, 2019

      Latest YouGov Brexit tracker finds the proportion of LAB voters thinking Brexit wrong moves to 79% - the highest level since the referendum. It has been in the low 70s pic.twitter.com/neMRUlG8G0

      — Mike Smithson (@MSmithsonPB) March 27, 2019

      Cabinet update

      They didn't know what she was going to say before she said it.

      — Sam Coates Sky (@SamCoatesSky) March 27, 2019

      Leadership candidates that are too transparently ambitious rarely win. Boris Johnson is the most transparent and clunky in his self serving contortions.

      — steve richards (@steverichards14) March 27, 2019

      Maybe decision tonight was inevitable - but PM’s senior colleagues didn’t know what she was going to do, even late this afternoon

      — Laura Kuenssberg (@bbclaurak) March 27, 2019

      Pm's plan is to go when phase one complete of brexit - so IF deal gets thro, tory leadership contest some time around May

      — Laura Kuenssberg (@bbclaurak) March 27, 2019

      Senior Tory MP on colleagues now saying they will back the PM's Brexit deal after she announced she'll quit once it's over the line: "Well that just sums them up."

      — Kevin Schofield (@KevinASchofield) March 27, 2019

      May’s announcement she’ll quit if her deal passes makes many of the indicative votes totally pointless: a new PM would not feel bound by the political declaration, so only the withdrawal agreement matters.

      — James Ball (@jamesrbuk) March 27, 2019

      If she keeps her promise, which her record renders far from certain, then she’ll emulate Cameron & leave others to clear up her mess. Brexiters will blunder about for a bit, revivifying various unicorn myths, blind to reality & their own epic inadequacies.
      And then chaos.
      Again.

      — James O'Brien (@mrjamesob) March 27, 2019

      I could very well see a Prime Minister Boris Johnson doing another 180 degree turn and selling ERGers down the river for a Soft Brexit if it is electorally expedient for him to do so

      — Alexander Clarkson (@APHClarkson) March 27, 2019

      "Consider the consequences for trust in politics if this House forces an outcome on the people that they no longer desire. That really would be the undemocratic establishment stitch-up of all time"

      Margaret Beckett on case for public vote on #Brexit deal https://t.co/VKX57e2ZY3 pic.twitter.com/0OeWEeqT2j

      — BBC Politics (@BBCPolitics) March 27, 2019
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