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European Union offers UK more time to leave the bloc

March 22, 2019 07:03 am | Updated November 28, 2021 10:07 am IST - Brussels

If May’s deal is passed by MPs, exit will be delayed till May 22, if it fails, U.K. will be given time till April 12

British Prime Minister Theresa May speaks during a media conference at an EU summit in Brussels on March 22, 2019.

Brexit is to be delayed till April 12 at the earliest, after European leaders agreed to a modified version of Theresa May’s request for an extension. Now if Ms. May’s withdrawal deal is passed by MPs next week, then Brexit will be delayed till May 22 — the day before European Parliamentary elections are set to take place.

If it fails, then the U.K. will be given time till April 12, two weeks after the date the U.K. had been set to leave the EU, to come up with a plan forward, the European Council said, following a meeting in Brussels late on Thursday. “What this means in practice is that until that date, all options will remain open, and the cliff-edge will be delayed,” said European Council President Donald Tusk. Britain still had the choice between a deal, no-deal, a long extension, or revoking Article 50, he added.

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The European Commission plan, which differs considerably from Ms. May’s original request to delay Brexit till June 30 if her deal were passed, throws new uncertainty at Brexit, even as its date has been pushed back. Ms. May had been planning to bring her meaningful vote back to MPs next week, with the deadline of March 29 looming and the prospect of crashing out without a deal.

However, with the government still struggling to get a majority of MPs to back her deal — particularly after remarks blaming Parliament for the mess have backfired — it is yet unclear when precisely the vote will take place. Speaking in the House of Commons, Kwasi Kwarteng, a junior minister within the Brexit Department, initially declined to put a precise date forward before acknowledging it is likely to take place next week.

As a result of the European Council decision, the government will also table the necessary legislation to move the date of Brexit.

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The developments are also piling pressure on the government to hold a series of indicative votes for parliamentarians to be able to identify the options they wish to pursue should the deal be rejected next week. “If the meaningful vote does not get through, we will have to look at alternatives,” acknowledged Mr. Kwarteng. There were “three choices facing the House:” accepting the deal, no deal or revoking Article 50 he said. However, were indicative votes to take place, they would likely be free votes, he added.

 

Alternative ways

A cross party group of MPs, including Britain’s former Attorney-General for England and Wales Dominic Grieve, and Hilary Benn (a former Labour Minister) are planning to table an amendment next week to give the House of Commons the power to identify alternative ways forward.

They are fearful that even with the delay, the government could continue with the same strategy regardless. “Very worried the PM still wants her delay or no deal and will run down the clock again till we end up with no deal chaos on April 12,” said Labour MP Yvette Cooper. “If the PM’s deal isn’t passed, the government must set out a plan to prevent no deal on April 12.”

Public pressure has been growing this week, amid little signs of progress and willingness to compromise by the government. A march for another referendum, “The People’s Vote”, is due to take place on Saturday in central London, while a petition calling for Article 50 to be revoked has gained over 3.2 million signatories. The government has insisted that it would be wrong to cancel Brexit — despite the public campaign — as it would undermine public trust in politics.

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