Britain faces calls for unity govt amid Brexit impasse

0

LONDON (AP) — The U.K. may be forced to create a national unity government to end the impasse over
Britain leaving the European Union, as Prime Minister Theresa May clings to the Brexit divorce agreement
that Parliament has rejected three times, a senior Conservative suggested Saturday.
Former Education Secretary Nicky Morgan’s comments came a day after the House of Commons rebuffed the
prime minister’s call for lawmakers to "put aside self and party," sending her Brexit deal to
its latest defeat. The rejection leaves the U.K. facing the stark prospect of a chaotic departure from
the EU in just two weeks — unless squabbling politicians can put aside their differences and engineer a
long delay in the process of leaving the bloc.
The British Parliament will vote Monday on a variety of Brexit alternatives in an attempt to find an idea
that can command a majority. But May’s government is considering a fourth vote on her deal, bolstered by
their success in narrowing her margin of defeat to 58 votes Friday from 230 votes in January.
"If the government refused and Theresa May felt she could not implement what Parliament had
identified as a way of leaving the EU, then I think we would have to think very hard about whether a
cross-party coalition … could do that in order to make sure that the U.K. does leave the EU in an
orderly fashion," Morgan told the BBC.
Britain has in the past had national unity governments in times of national crisis, such as World War II.
But critics point out that such coalitions were forged when there was a single goal — such as defeating
Nazi Germany. It is unclear now how Britain’s political parties would agree to cooperate on an issue
like Brexit, which has split the country and its two major political parties, May’s ruling Conservatives
and the opposition Labour Party.
As a result of Friday’s vote, the U.K. is now scheduled to leave the EU on April 12, regardless of
whether the two sides have reached an agreement to cushion the impact. That has led to concerns about
crippling tariffs, border gridlock and shortages of food and medicines.
EU officials have suggested, however, they may agree to a lengthy delay to Britain’s departure from the
bloc if U.K. politicians agree on a plan.
The House of Commons on Wednesday began the process of debating alternatives to the prime minister’s deal
but rejected all eight proposals they considered. Two ideas, a customs union with the EU and a second
referendum on any deal, achieved significant support. Lawmakers are expected to hold a second round of
votes Monday on Brexit proposals.
Hilary Benn, a Labour Party lawmaker who chairs Parliament’s Brexit committee, dismissed criticism that
the parliamentary process was a failure because it didn’t deliver a majority in the first round of
voting. Benn said he hopes the latest defeat for May’s deal will "concentrate minds" and help
build a clear majority for one of the Brexit options.
"Since it took 2 3/4 years for the government to get what it had negotiated defeated three times,
it’s a little bit harsh on Parliament, when it started the process last Wednesday, for not having
immediately solved the problem in 24 hours," Benn said. "So I think a little bit more time is
a perfectly reasonable thing to provide as we try and find a way forward."
While Benn and Morgan are pushing for compromise, others are demanding that the Conservative-led
government not cave in.
Some hard-line Conservative Party lawmakers have written to May insisting that she not agree to a Brexit
extension beyond May 22, which would force the U.K. to take part in the May 23-26 European Parliament
elections, The Sun newspaper reported. The letter, signed by 170 members of the prime minister’s party,
called on May to bring her deal back to Parliament for a fourth vote, with the threat of a general
election if it is rejected again, the newspaper said.
Brandon Lewis, a Cabinet member and chairman of the Conservative Party, said he was aware of the letter,
though he had not seen the final text or the signatures.
"We should be doing everything we can to leave the European Union in good order as quickly as we
can, as we said in our manifesto and as we’ve said to Parliament," Lewis said. "I think the
deal is the right way to do that."
___
Follow AP’s full coverage of Brexit at: https://www.apnews.com/Brexit

No posts to display