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пятница, 15 февраля 2019 г.

«Breaking News» Claims Brexit Secretary told Barnier Britain does NOT want to re-open the divorce deal

Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay told EU negotiator Michel Barnier Britain did not have to re-open the divorce deal in a major concession, it was claimed today.


The climbdown will enrage Brexiteers who says the only chance of the deal passing in time for exit day is with the Irish border backstop being re-written. 


During talks this week, Mr Barclay is said to have endorsed legal guarantees on the current wording - far short of what scores of Tory MPs have demanded. 


In a warning shot to the Prime Minister, MPs in the hardline European Research Group refused to endorse her negotiating strategy, consigning her to another humiliating defeat in the Commons.


Mrs May was also abandoned by Remain rebels demanding no deal is taken off the table as she collapsed to a 303 to 258 vote defeat.


The anti no deal MPs were boosted in the aftermath of the vote as Foreign Office Minister Alistair Burt said Britain would not leave with no deal in March.


Commons leader Andrea Leadsom insisted today last night's defeat was only a 'hiccup' for the PM and said she would continue to seek 'legally binding changes to the backstop'.




In a warning shot to the Prime Minister (pictured leaving Parliament last night), MPs in the hardline European Research Group refused to endorse her negotiating strategy, consigning her to another humiliating defeat in the Commons


In a warning shot to the Prime Minister (pictured leaving Parliament last night), MPs in the hardline European Research Group refused to endorse her negotiating strategy, consigning her to another humiliating defeat in the Commons


In a warning shot to the Prime Minister (pictured leaving Parliament last night), MPs in the hardline European Research Group refused to endorse her negotiating strategy, consigning her to another humiliating defeat in the Commons





Commons leader Andrea Leadsom (pictured leaving Parliament last night) insisted today last night's defeat was only a 'hiccup' for the PM and said she would continue to seek 'legally binding changes to the backstop'


Commons leader Andrea Leadsom (pictured leaving Parliament last night) insisted today last night's defeat was only a 'hiccup' for the PM and said she would continue to seek 'legally binding changes to the backstop'



Commons leader Andrea Leadsom (pictured leaving Parliament last night) insisted today last night's defeat was only a 'hiccup' for the PM and said she would continue to seek 'legally binding changes to the backstop'





Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay (pictured in the Commons yesterday) told EU negotiator Michel Barnier Britain did not have to re-open the divorce deal in a major concession, it was claimed today


Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay (pictured in the Commons yesterday) told EU negotiator Michel Barnier Britain did not have to re-open the divorce deal in a major concession, it was claimed today


Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay (pictured in the Commons yesterday) told EU negotiator Michel Barnier Britain did not have to re-open the divorce deal in a major concession, it was claimed today



Mrs Leadsom told the Today programme that no was 'absolutely' still on the table.


She said: 'The Government is working at pace to deliver what Parliament has clearly told us.' 


She added: 'The vote yesterday did not change anything.' 


Despite Mrs Leadsom's claims, a source involved in the talks on the Irish backstop between Mr Barclay and Mr Barnier this week told The Times, the Brexit secretary said the British focus was on the 'outcome'.


He told Mr Barnier as long as the commitments were legally binding 'it will meet needs'.

Mr Barnier was told the exact nature of the legal guarantees were a 'question for the attorney-general' and that there was plenty of room for 'creativity about how it can be done'. 


As tensions mount today, Mr Burt said: 'We won’t. We are not leaving without a deal. If you want to leave, you’d better agree one. In the next fortnight would help.' 


He added: 'There is a majority in the House to reject no deal. Let’s Leave, with the Agreement, and the chance of a new relationship with the EU.


'Honours both Leavers and those who voted to Remain. Let’s all make the compromise.' 










As tensions mount today, Mr Burt said: 'We won’t. We are not leaving without a deal. If you want to leave, you’d better agree one. In the next fortnight would help.'


As tensions mount today, Mr Burt said: 'We won’t. We are not leaving without a deal. If you want to leave, you’d better agree one. In the next fortnight would help.'



As tensions mount today, Mr Burt said: 'We won’t. We are not leaving without a deal. If you want to leave, you’d better agree one. In the next fortnight would help.'



In total 66 Tories went missing for last night's showdown, while five actively opposed her. 


Summing up the pincer movement Mrs May found herself caught in, both arch-Brexiteer Boris Johnson and his pro-EU brother Jo abstained. 


Mrs May did not even bother to enter the chamber to hear the grim result, with Jeremy Corbyn demanding to know where she was and taunting that she 'can't keep running the clock down'.


The blow came despite Brexit Secretary Steve Barclay desperately trying to reassure mutinous MPs that no deal is not being taken off the table - and warning that Brussels will conclude the UK's 'resolve is weakening'. 


But his tough words only served further to infuriate Remainers. 


The defeat has no binding effect on the government, but plunges her deeper into chaos and could persuade the EU there is no point offering any more concessions on the Irish border backstop.   



Theresa May was notably absent from the Commons chamber as the grim result was declared last night and Jeremy Corbyn taunted that she 'can't keep running the clock down'


Theresa May was notably absent from the Commons chamber as the grim result was declared last night and Jeremy Corbyn taunted that she 'can't keep running the clock down'



Theresa May was notably absent from the Commons chamber as the grim result was declared last night and Jeremy Corbyn taunted that she 'can't keep running the clock down'




The PM crashed to defeat in a crunch vote on her EU plan by 303 to 258 after furious Conservative Eurosceptics declared they would abstain


The PM crashed to defeat in a crunch vote on her EU plan by 303 to 258 after furious Conservative Eurosceptics declared they would abstain



The PM crashed to defeat in a crunch vote on her EU plan by 303 to 258 after furious Conservative Eurosceptics declared they would abstain



Following the vote, a clearly jubilant Mr Corbyn said Mrs May needed to accept her strategy had failed and come forward with a plan that could bring people together to prevent the 'catastrophe' of no deal.


'The Government cannot keep on ignoring Parliament and ploughing on towards March 29 without a coherent plan,' he said.



What did the Theresa May's motion say?



MPs threw out Theresa May's latest Brexit motion by 303 to 258 - a majority of 45.


The motion was intended to reinforce Mrs May's negotiating position by showing there was a majority for the Brexit deal in the Commons if the Irish border backstop is re-written.


It said MPs still backed the vote on January 29 which spelt this out.


The problem for the PM tonight is that on January 29 MPs also voted against no deal - creating a deep split inside the Tories about whether her motion also reflected this.  


The motion read: 'That this House welcomes the Prime Minister’s statement of 12 February 2019; reiterates its support for the approach to leaving the EU expressed by this House on 29 January 2019 and notes that discussions between the UK and the EU on the Northern Ireland backstop are ongoing.' 


In the end, both Leave and Remain MPs abstained on the motion - consigning the PM to another humiliating defeat.  




'She cannot keep on just running down the clock and hoping that something will turn up that will save her day and save her face.'


He asked Speaker John Bercow if there was anything that could be done about Mrs May not turning up to the chamber to hear the result, but was told she was not obliged to be there. 


Senior Tory MPs admitted the Commons showdown had turned into a 'fiasco', but tried to play down the implications - saying the next round of votes on February 27 would be far more significant. 


A Downing Street spokesman said: 'While we didn't secure the support of the Commons this evening, the Prime Minister continues to believe, and the debate itself indicated, that far from objecting to securing changes to the backstop that will allow us to leave with a deal, there was a concern from some Conservative colleagues about taking no deal off the table at this stage.


'The motion on 29th January remains the only one the House of Commons has passed expressing what it does want – and that is legally binding changes to address concerns about the backstop. The Government will continue to pursue this with the EU to ensure we leave on time on March 29.'


The PM's spat with Brexiteers centred on a Remainer-backed amendment that was passed by MPs two weeks ago rejecting the idea of no deal. 


An amendment put forward by former Cabinet minister Caroline Spelman said the UK should not 'leave the European Union without a Withdrawal Agreement and a Framework for the Future Relationship'. 


It was narrowly approved by 318 votes to 310 despite the government whipping against.


Although that vote was not binding on ministers, the government motion due to be considered tonight endorses 'the approach to leaving the EU expressed by this House on 29 January'. 


That was apparently intended as a reference to the Brady amendment, which called for the Irish backstop to be replaced with 'alternative arrangements' and was passed with Mrs May's blessing.   


However, it was interpreted by Brexiteers as Mrs May admitting that no deal is off the agenda - despite her repeatedly insisting it is still a possibility.


During the debate, Tory MP Bill Cash said branded the Government motion 'doublethink' and said it 'further undermines public trust'.


He said: 'We're now truly entering the world of George Orwell's Ministry of Truth.


'In his book 1984 Orwell said doublethink means the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in one's mind simultaneously and expecting both of them.


'This double motion is doublethink in action and I cannot possibly vote for it.' 


But former chancellor Ken Clarke launched a scathing attack on the ERG. 


He said: 'The Government has pursued one of the factions on our side of the House, we have a kind of breakaway party within a party, a bit like Momentum really, they've got their leader, they've got their chief whip.


'They are ardent right-wingers, and the Government has set off in pursuit of these bizarre negotiating tactics that some of them say, though some of them seem to want to leave with no deal, because any agreement with foreigners from the continent is a threat to our sovereignty.'


He warned that is 'the wrong group to pursue', and called the Brady amendment 'meaningless'.


But after Mr Barclay entreated Eurosceptics to fall in line, Remainer former Cabinet minister Oliver Letwin said he now believed Mrs May would go for no deal.


'When the chips are down, (she) will actually prefer to do what some of my esteemed colleagues prefer, and to head for the exit door without a deal, which the secretary of state informed us is the policy of Her Majesty's government in the event that her deal has not succeeded. That is terrifying fact,' he told the House. 


Frantic peace talks took place with chief whip Julian Smith overnight to see if the motion could be reworded, but they appeared to reach no settlement. 


Who were the 66 Tory MPs who abstained and the five who voted No to consign May to defeat?



There were 66 Tory MPs who failed to vote at all on Theresa May's motion tonight - and five who joined Labour to vote No.


The five who voted No were: Peter Bone (Wellingborough), Christopher Chope (Christchurch), Philip Hollobone (Kettering), Anne-Marie Morris (Newton Abbott) and Sarah Wollaston (Totnes). 


The abstainers were: 





 Heidi Allen (Conservative - South Cambridgeshire) 


Sir David Amess (Conservative - Southend West) 


Mr Richard Bacon (Conservative - South Norfolk)


Mr Steve Baker (Conservative - Wycombe)


Guto Bebb (Conservative - Aberconwy)


Crispin Blunt (Conservative - Reigate)


Suella Braverman (Conservative - Fareham)


Andrew Bridgen (Conservative - North West Leicestershire)


Conor Burns (Conservative - Bournemouth West)


Sir William Cash (Conservative - Stone)


Rehman Chishti (Conservative - Gillingham and Rainham)


Mr Kenneth Clarke (Conservative - Rushcliffe)


Mr Simon Clarke (Conservative - Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)


Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (Conservative - The Cotswolds)


Philip Davies (Conservative - Shipley)


Ms Nadine Dorries (Conservative - Mid Bedfordshire)


Richard Drax (Conservative - South Dorset)


James Duddridge (Conservative - Rochford and Southend East)


Mr Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative - Chingford and Woodford Green)


Charlie Elphicke (Conservative - Dover)


Michael Fabricant (Conservative - Lichfield)


Mr Mark Francois (Conservative - Rayleigh and Wickford)


Mr Marcus Fysh (Conservative - Yeovil)


James Gray (Conservative - North Wiltshire)


Chris Green (Conservative - Bolton West)  


Justine Greening (Conservative - Putney)


Mr Dominic Grieve (Conservative - Beaconsfield)


Mr Sam Gyimah (Conservative - East Surrey)


Mr Mark Harper (Conservative - Forest of Dean)


Adam Holloway (Conservative - Gravesham)


Mr Ranil Jayawardena (Conservative - North East Hampshire)


Sir Bernard Jenkin (Conservative - Harwich and North Essex)


Andrea Jenkyns (Conservative - Morley and Outwood)  






Boris Johnson (Conservative - Uxbridge and South Ruislip) 


Joseph Johnson (Conservative - Orpington)


Mr David Jones (Conservative - Clwyd West)


Mrs Pauline Latham (Conservative - Mid Derbyshire)


Dr Phillip Lee (Conservative - Bracknell)


Andrew Lewer (Conservative - Northampton South)


Dr Julian Lewis (Conservative - New Forest East)


Julia Lopez (Conservative - Hornchurch and Upminster)


Mr Jonathan Lord (Conservative - Woking)


Tim Loughton (Conservative - East Worthing and Shoreham)


 


Craig Mackinlay (Conservative - South Thanet)


Esther McVey (Conservative - Tatton)


Mrs Sheryll Murray (Conservative - South East Cornwall)


Dr Matthew Offord (Conservative - Hendon)


Priti Patel (Conservative - Witham)


Mr Owen Paterson (Conservative - North Shropshire)


Dominic Raab (Conservative - Esher and Walton)


John Redwood (Conservative - Wokingham)


Mr Jacob Rees-Mogg (Conservative - North East Somerset)


Mr Laurence Robertson (Conservative - Tewkesbury)


Andrew Rosindell (Conservative - Romford)


Douglas Ross (Conservative - Moray)


Lee Rowley (Conservative - North East Derbyshire)


Antoinette Sandbach (Conservative - Eddisbury)


Grant Shapps (Conservative - Welwyn Hatfield)


Henry Smith (Conservative - Crawley)


Anna Soubry (Conservative - Broxtowe)


Bob Stewart (Conservative - Beckenham)


Ross Thomson (Conservative - Aberdeen South)


Anne-Marie Trevelyan (Conservative - Berwick-upon-Tweed)


Mr Shailesh Vara (Conservative - North West Cambridgeshire)


Theresa Villiers (Conservative - Chipping Barnet)


Mr John Whittingdale (Conservative - Maldon)







Earlier, Trade Secretary Liam Fox pleaded with his colleagues not to rebel, warning that the Commons is not an 'internal debating society' and it would 'send the wrong signals' to Brussels. 


Dr Fox told BBC Radio 4's Today programme this morning: 'Our European partners will be watching our debate and listening today to see if they get the impression that if they were to make those concessions Parliament would definitely deliver. 


'There's a danger that we send the wrong signals.' 


But ERG vice-chair Steve Baker shot back: 'Conservative MPs really ought not to be associated with anything, express or implied, which seems to take no deal off the table.



Ex-ambassadors warn Theresa May against no-deal Brexit 



A group of retired diplomats have issued a plea to Theresa May to delay Brexit to allow more time to establish a clearer plan or allow for a second referendum. 


In a statement to The Times, more than 40 former ambassadors and Foreign Office mandarins warned that if the Prime Minister secured agreement on her plan, it would not mark the end of uncertainty but the start of years of negotiations. 


They reported 'exasperation and incomprehension' among contacts overseas at the UK's failure to resolve its differences over its future relationship with the EU. 


The statement, organised by supporters of a second referendum, was signed by former ambassadors to the US, France and Russia, as well as one-time head of the Foreign Office Lord Kerr, one of the authors of the Article 50 clause which sets out the process for quitting the EU. 




'Compromising no deal would be the daftest negotiating strategy and not in the national interest. Today's storm in a teacup only arises because the Government's motion is not neutral. This unnecessary carry on is wanted by no one.'   


Tory former minister Nicky Morgan, who has been urging a Norway-style relationship with the EU, added: 'If the Government had taken the time to discuss the wording of the motion with MPs on all sides of the Brexit debate they'd have achieved a clear & united signal to the EU as Brady did on 29th January.' 


EU council president Donald Tusk upped the ante last night by jibing that the bloc had still not heard any 'realistic' solutions from the UK. 


'No news is not always good news,' he tweeted.  


Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte also said Britain was a 'more diminished country compared to two or three years ago'. 


Campaigners for a second referendum have been divided over whether to force a Commons vote on the issue tonight, with many fearing they would lose badly.


But the Commons business paper today included an amendment tabled by senior Tory Sarah Wollaston and backed by Lib Dem and Labour MPs.


It would have forced a series of votes in the House on Brexit options, and then throw the issue over to the wider public in a national vote if politicians could not agree on one course. 


The Labour leadership had stayed tight-lipped over whether it would support the move - the only way it would have any chance of getting through Parliament. 


But in the end the Speaker saved Mr Corbyn's blushes by ignoring the amendment. 


Instead he chose three changes for debate. The first was a Labour demand for a new meaningful vote to approve the deal is held on or before February 27, which was comfortably seen. 


An SNP amendment called for at least a three month extension to Article 50 to avoid a no deal Brexit on March 29. 


It was backed by 41 Labour MPs, underlining the splits in Mr Corbyn's team, but came nowhere near passing.


A tweak tabled by Tory Anna Soubry insisted the Government must publish the most recent advice given to Cabinet on the implications of no deal.


The Soubry amendment looked on track to pass. However, she was persuaded to shelve the move for the time being after ministers said they will publish no-deal assessments soon.



MPs passed Spelman amendment that rejected no-deal Brexit 



The latest Tory infighting centres on a Remainer-backed amendment that was passed by MPs two weeks ago rejecting the idea of no deal.


The text put forward by former Cabinet minister Caroline Spelman said the UK should not 'leave the European Union without a Withdrawal Agreement and a Framework for the Future Relationship'. 


It was narrowly approved by 318 votes to 310 despite the government whipping against.


Although that vote was not binding on ministers, the government motion due to be considered tonight endorses 'the approach to leaving the EU expressed by this House on 29 January'. 


That was apparently intended as a reference to the Brady amendment, which called for the Irish backstop to be replaced with 'alternative arrangements' and was passed with Mrs May's blessing.  


However, in evidence of the level of distrust within the Tories it has been interpreted by Brexiteers as Mrs May admitting that no deal is off the agenda - despite her repeatedly insisting it is still a possibility. 




The row about tonight's Commons motion vote appeared to catch Downing Street by surprise. It was intended to produce a show of unity for Mrs May to take back to Brussels.


The ERG decision to pick a fight appeared to be motivated by anger over comments from Mrs May's chief Brexit negotiator Olly Robbins in a Brussels bar, in which he suggested Mrs May would rather order a 'long' delay to the UK's departure than leave without a deal next month.


Labour will back an amendment which would force Mrs May to delay Brexit if she cannot get her deal through Parliament.


Labour's Brexit spokesman Sir Keir Starmer confirmed the party would support a revised amendment by Yvette Cooper obliging the Prime Minister to ask for an extension to Article 50 beyond March 29.


It was defeated in the Commons last month, after a number of Labour MPs voted against it.


Meanwhile, a group of retired diplomats have issued a plea to Mrs May to delay Brexit to allow more time to establish a clearer plan or allow for a second referendum. 


In a statement to The Times, more than 40 former ambassadors and Foreign Office mandarins warned that if the Prime Minister secured agreement on her plan, it would not mark the end of uncertainty but the start of years of negotiations. 


They reported 'exasperation and incomprehension' among contacts overseas at the UK's failure to resolve its differences over its future relationship with the EU. 


The statement, organised by supporters of a second referendum, was signed by former ambassadors to the US, France and Russia, as well as one-time head of the Foreign Office Lord Kerr, one of the authors of the Article 50 clause which sets out the process for quitting the EU. 



What are the options for reworking the Irish border backstop? 



The EU has flatly dismissed calls for the Withdrawal Agreement to be reopened.


But Theresa May has promised MPs that she will somehow get legally-binding changes that satisfy concerns about the Irish border backstop.


Here are some possible options for how the PM might seek to get through the impasse.


A unilateral exit clause


Prominent backbenchers including former Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab has pushed Mrs May to seek a unilateral get-out from the backstop.


The current mechanism can only be deactivated through a joint review system - although the EU insists it is technically 'temporary'.  


But Brussels has insisted that an 'insurance policy' that can be ended by one side is not acceptable.


Expiry date


A hard end date to the backstop would allay the fears of most Tory MPs - as long as it is not too far in the future. 


Boris Johnson has suggested he could vote for the deal if she manages to get a time limit, although he also said it should conclude before the next election in May 2022.


The former foreign secretary also unhelpfully insisted a legal 'codicil' - an amendment which would run alongside the Withdrawal Agreement - would not be enough to win him over and he wants the whole thing unpicked.


Again, the EU has insisted it will not agree to a backstop that is time limited. 


The 'Malthouse Compromise' 


Tory Remainers and Brexiteers have been working on a proposal to replace the backstop with a looser, Canada-style free trade arrangements. The plan would deploy technology in a bid to avoid a hard border.


But Brussels has already dismissed the technogical solutions as 'magical thinking', saying the systems needed do not yet exist.  


Guarantees that the backstop will only be 'temporary' 


The EU's top official, Martin Selmayr floated the idea of 'unzipping' the Withdrawal Agreement and inserting new guarantees about the 'temporary' nature of the backstop during meetings with MPs.


He suggested the text of recent letters from Donald Tusk and Jean-Claude Juncker could be cut and pasted in without reopening other terms.


But that would be highly unlikely to satisfy Brexiteers. 




 


Link hienalouca.com

https://hienalouca.com/2019/02/15/claims-brexit-secretary-told-barnier-britain-does-not-want-to-re-open-the-divorce-deal/
Main photo article Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay told EU negotiator Michel Barnier Britain did not have to re-open the divorce deal in a major concession, it was claimed today.
The climbdown will enrage Brexiteers who says the only chance of the deal passing in time for exit day is with the Irish border...


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Dianne Reeves Online news HienaLouca





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