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Britain's May will allow Brexit delay in exceptional circumstances


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Britain's May will allow Brexit delay in exceptional circumstances

By William James

 

2017-12-20T010459Z_1_LYNXMPEDBJ010_RTROPTP_3_BRITAIN-POLITICS.JPG

FILE PHOTO: Nicky Morgan arrives to attend a cabinet meeting at Number 10 Downing Street in London, Britain February 2, 2016. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth/File Photo

 

LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister Theresa May said on Wednesday she would permit a short delay to Britain's departure from the European Union in exceptional circumstances, bowing to criticism from her own party over the government's plan to fix the exit date in law.

 

The decision is a compromise with Conservative lawmakers who last week rebelled in parliament and inflicted an embarrassing defeat on May during a debate on the legislation which will end Britain's EU membership.

 

May had been headed for a second defeat later on Wednesday after several members of her party said they would vote against writing the date of Britain's EU exit, March 29, 2019, into law.

 

Rebels had signalled they would be prepared to back down if a proviso was added to the bill allowing that date to be changed if necessary.

 

Speaking ahead of an eight-hour debate on the legislation, May told parliament she would accept the compromise.

 

"We have accepted the amendment... but I can assure ...(members of parliament) that we would only use this power in exceptional circumstances, for the shortest possible time," May said.

 

May is facing a tight timetable to deliver Brexit.

 

She wants to negotiate a transition deal with Brussels by March to reassure businesses and then seal a long term trade deal by October. Brussels has signalled a detailed trade deal is likely to take much longer, and that Britain's transition period must end by 2020.

 

In addition, May's government has to undertake the huge legislative task of transferring the existing body of EU law into British law before it leaves in order to provide legal certainty for businesses.

 

(Reporting by William James; editing by Stephen Addison/Jeremy Gaunt)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-12-21
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"We have accepted the amendment... but I can assure ...(members of parliament) that we would only use this power in exceptional circumstances, for the shortest possible time,"

 

Everything is negotiable and open ended.......in Parliament (and the EU).

 

"Yes yes my dear, perhaps next year, or maybe even.........never"

                                                                "Reasons to be Cheerful", Ian Dury

 

 

 

 

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A bit of common sense from the PM.  She now has to backtrack on some of the things she insisted on because they are not practical.  I don't think this is a sign of Brexit being jeopardised.  There is too much blood on the carpet already and to scrap it now would probably mean the collapse of the government.

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3 hours ago, dunroaming said:

A bit of common sense from the PM.  She now has to backtrack on some of the things she insisted on because they are not practical.  I don't think this is a sign of Brexit being jeopardised.  There is too much blood on the carpet already and to scrap it now would probably mean the collapse of the government.

This govt is haemorrhaging ministers as it is. 

 

Three in as many weeks. 

 

Inept, incompetent and, in the case of the latest minister to be fired, overly fond of pornography. 

Edited by Bluespunk
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