Setback for May as MPs begin Brexit debate before vote

PM’s attempts to win over lawmakers from DUP rebuffed

January 09, 2019 10:21 pm | Updated 10:21 pm IST - London

U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May.

U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May.

British MPs on Wednesday began five days of debate ahead of a historic delayed vote on Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal, a day after giving her a stinging blow aimed at preventing the country from crashing out of the EU with no agreement.

Ms. May’s attempts to win over MPs from Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), which props up her government in Parliament but is firmly opposed to the Brexit deal, were also rebuffed on Wednesday.

Offer on ‘backstop’

The government said it would grant local lawmakers in Northern Ireland greater powers to block legislation if their province ever found itself in a contentious “backstop” arrangement to avoid a hard border in Ireland.

But DUP Brexit spokesman Sammy Wilson told Sky News that the proposals were “window dressing” and that there would still have to be checks between Northern Ireland and mainland Britain in the event the backstop is enacted.

Ms. May faced another possible setback later on Wednesday as rebel Conservative MPs pushed for a vote that would force the government to reveal its plans within three days if the Brexit deal is not approved next Tuesday. Lawmakers next week will be voting on the agreement that Ms. May has negotiated with the EU over the last 18 months, which faces daunting opposition as the clock ticks down before Britain leaves the EU on March 29.

The Prime Minister has warned rebels in her own party that defeat will lead to a no-deal Brexit, or no departure from the bloc at all.

But in a vote on Tuesday that raised the chances of a defeat in next week’s vote, MPs, including former Ministers, approved an amendment that will curtail the government’s tax powers in case of a no-deal Brexit.

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