May's Government is seeking permission from MPs to trigger the start of the Brexit process by invoking Article 50 of the EU's Lisbon Treaty. Members of Parliament are debating a draft law that would give the PM the authority to fire the starting gun on Brexit, a law she was forced to produce after Supreme Court judges ruled she had to seek the approval of Parliament first.
The PM wants MPs to pass the bill quickly so she can meet her deadline of triggering Article 50 by March 31.
The concession from Jones initially satisfied some, though not all, opponents of May's plans.
Keir Starmer, the Brexit spokesman from the Labour Party, welcomed it. "It is a very significant decision by the Government and I am very grateful that it has been made," he said.
Other MPs were more sceptical. The Government is "treating Parliament with contempt," said the Green Party's Caroline Lucas. "They're offering a 'choice' between an extreme Brexit and a cliff edge."
And later in the debate, several Conservatives dismissed Jones's concession, saying it didn't give them the guarantees they needed.
Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Kenneth Clarke summarised the minister's offer as a "take it or leave it" vote. If MPs chose to reject the deal, the UK would have no trading agreement with the EU and would have to revert to World Trade Organisation terms, Clarke said.
Jones confirmed that the fallback option for the UK if Parliament decides to throw out the final Brexit agreement, would be WTO terms with higher tariffs.
- Bloomberg