‘Brexit Could Be Lost’: British PM’s Deal Defeated—Again

Reuters
By Reuters
March 12, 2019UK
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‘Brexit Could Be Lost’: British PM’s Deal Defeated—Again
Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May speaks in Parliament in London, United Kingdom, on March 12, 2019. (Reuters TV)

LONDON, United Kingdom—Britain’s Parliament rejected Prime Minister Theresa May’s deal to quit the European Union for a second time on March 12, deepening the country’s worst political crisis for generations, 17 days before the planned departure date.

Lawmakers voted against May’s amended Brexit deal 391–242 as her last-minute talks with EU chiefs on March 11 to assuage her critics’ concerns ultimately proved fruitless.

The vote puts the world’s fifth largest economy in uncharted territory with no obvious way forward: Exiting the EU without a deal, delaying the March 29 divorce date, a snap election, or even another referendum are all now possible.

May might even try a third time to get parliamentary support in the hope that hardline euroskeptic lawmakers in her Conservative Party, the most vocal critics of her withdrawal treaty, might change their minds if it becomes more likely that Britain might stay in the EU after all.

While she lost, the margin of defeat was smaller than the record 230-vote loss her deal suffered in January.

“If this vote is not passed tonight, if this deal is not passed, then Brexit could be lost,” a hoarse-voiced May told lawmakers before her deal was defeated.

Lawmakers are now due to vote on March 13 on whether Britain should exit the world’s biggest trading bloc without a deal, a scenario that business leaders warn would bring chaos to markets and supply chains, and other critics say could cause shortages of food and medicines.

Supporters of Brexit argue that, while a “no-deal” divorce might bring some short-term instability, in the longer term it would allow the United Kingdom to thrive and forge beneficial trade deals across the world.

However, Parliament is expected to firmly reject a “no-deal” Brexit as well, so lawmakers would then vote on March 14 whether or not government should request a delay to the leaving date to allow further talks.

Both May and the EU have already ruled out any other changes to the deal, struck after two-and-a-half years of tortuous negotiations.

In a last-ditch bid to save her Brexit plan, May rushed to Strasbourg on March 11 to agree to legally binding assurances with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker.

A tired-looking Juncker acknowledged the protracted discussions as he addressed the European Parliament in Strasbourg on the morning of March 12.

“There will be no third chance,” Juncker said. “There will be no further interpretations of the interpretations, no further assurances of the reassurances if the ‘meaningful vote’ tomorrow fails.”

Earlier in the day, former British foreign secretary and leading Brexit campaigner Boris Johnson said May’s Brexit deal had reached the end of the road and Britain should leave the bloc without an agreement.

Johnson said if the EU was unwilling to accept further changes, Britain should leave without a deal as while this would be more difficult in the short term, in the end it would be “the only safe route out of the abyss and the only safe path to self respect.”

Britons voted 52–48 percent in 2016 to leave the EU, but the decision has not only divided the main parties but also exposed deep rifts in British society, bringing concerns about immigration and globalization to the fore.

Many fear that Brexit will divide the West as it grapples with growing assertiveness from Russia and China, leaving Britain economically weaker and with its security capabilities depleted.

Supporters say it allows Britain to control immigration and take advantage of global opportunities, striking new trade deals with the United States and others while still keeping close links to the EU, which, even without Britain, would be a single market of 440 million people.

By Elizabeth Piper and Kylie MacLellan

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