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суббота, 1 декабря 2018 г.

«Breaking News» Nine days to save Brexit: Theresa May promises to fight tirelessly in 'momentous' build up to vote

Theresa May last night warned the country she had ‘nine days to save Brexit’ – as her allies fumed at the ‘betrayal’ by a Government Minister who quit over her deal with Brussels.


The Prime Minister told The Mail on Sunday she would not be deterred by the resignation of Universities Minister Sam Gyimah over a demand for a second referendum – and promised to fight tirelessly during the ‘momentous’ days ahead to win the crunch Commons vote on December 11.


Her remarks, at the G20 summit of world leaders in Buenos Aires, Argentina, came as:



  • A cross-party group of MPs tried to crank up the pressure on Mrs May to call a second referendum;

  • At least eight Cabinet Ministers lobbied for a Norway-style membership of a customs union if Mrs May loses the vote;

  • Tony Blair revealed how the Government had lobbied him to back Mrs May over her deal; 

  • Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe used the summit to issue an appeal to the Prime Minister to prevent a no-deal Brexit;

  • Mrs May signalled her confidence that she would still be Prime Minister at Christmas by starting to send out official cards from No 10;

  • A Tory MP accused Mrs May of ‘snubbing’ the Falklands by refusing to visit the disputed territory after her trip to Argentina.






How YOU can stop No Deal chaos... by sending MPs this letter 



Dear _______________________________


I am writing to you as one of your constituents to ask you, with the greatest respect, to hear what I have to say before you vote on the Brexit Bill in Parliament on Tuesday, December 11. I firmly believe it is in the national interest that you support the Prime Minister’s deal.


I understand that you, like many who voted either Leave or Remain in the 2016 referendum, have reservations about the deal Theresa May has negotiated. Not even the PM is pretending it is perfect. But it is my strong belief that by ending free movement, restoring sovereignty to Parliament and liberating Britain’s fishermen and farmers from EU control, the Withdrawal Agreement delivers much of what 17.4 million voters demanded at the referendum.


For Westminster to turn its back on those voters now would be a dangerous travesty – risking alienating vast swathes of the country from the democratic process for ever. Remember the Government leaflet delivered to every home before the vote said: ‘This is your decision. The Government will implement what you decide.’ No talk there of a second referendum.


The truth is none of the Prime Minister’s critics have come up with a credible alternative to her plan. The most likely alternative – a departure from the European Union with no deal at all – is a leap in the dark which could do permanent damage to our economy and society. Many wise voices have warned of potential chaos. I believe it is simply a risk not worth taking.


With your support, that perilous prospect can be avoided. You must be aware that the British people are tired of the bickering over Brexit. They just want to agree a deal and move on. The time has come to reunite the country around a wise compromise and begin to heal the wounds. 


So I urge you – and all your fellow MPs – to put aside your differences and come together at this historic moment and vote in favour of the Brexit deal on December 11.


This is not a vote for Theresa May. It is a vote for Britain’s independent, secure and prosperous future.


Yours sincerely


_____________________________




Mr Gyimah said he was resigning from the Government because Mrs May’s deal would mean the UK losing its voice in the EU while still having to abide by the bloc’s rules.


He said: ‘In these protracted negotiations, our interests will be repeatedly and permanently hammered by the EU27 for many years to come.


‘Britain will end up worse off, transformed from rule makers into rule takers… To vote for this deal is to set ourselves up for failure. We will be losing, not taking control, of our national destiny.’



Prime Minister Theresa May speaks during a press conference after the G20 Leader's Summit in Buenos Aires, Argentina on Saturday, December 1


Prime Minister Theresa May speaks during a press conference after the G20 Leader's Summit in Buenos Aires, Argentina on Saturday, December 1


Prime Minister Theresa May speaks during a press conference after the G20 Leader's Summit in Buenos Aires, Argentina on Saturday, December 1



His move meant that the No 10 team in Buenos Aires spent Friday battling in vain to avert his resignation – while juggling diplomatically fraught encounters with Donald Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.


They were also furious that Mr Gyimah’s resignation – the seventh by a Minister over the issue – overshadowed a carefully timed declaration of support by Environment Secretary and leading Brexiteer Michael Gove.



After the Pizza Plotters and the Gang of Five, No 10. is braced for more resignations from The Breakfast Club



Former Universities Minister Sam Gyimah was spotted plotting in a private room of a hotel in Westminster on Tuesday morning, writes Harry Cole. 


He was with a hardcore bloc of Remainer Ministers dubbed The Breakfast Club after the 1980s ‘Brat Pack’ movie that saw five troublesome students forced into early morning detention by an unpopular head teacher.


Mr Gyimah, who resigned on Friday, tucked into eggs and bacon at St Ermin’s Hotel – a favourite haunt of wartime spies – along with Cabinet Ministers Greg Clark and David Gauke, and former Transport Minister Jo Johnson, who resigned the week before. 


They were also joined by Business Minister Margot James, who was yesterday forced to clarify that she would not be the next to quit.


‘I fully intend to support the deal the PM is putting to Parliament on December 11,’ she said.




A hardcore bloc of remainer Ministers have been dubbed 'The Breakfast Club' after the 1980s cult movie (pictured) 


A hardcore bloc of remainer Ministers have been dubbed 'The Breakfast Club' after the 1980s cult movie (pictured) 



A hardcore bloc of remainer Ministers have been dubbed 'The Breakfast Club' after the 1980s cult movie (pictured) 





A senior source said: ‘It’s a stab in the back from someone [Mr Gyimah] who hopes to be leader. But the only person tipping Sam for leader is Sam.’


But Mrs May told this newspaper she ‘profoundly disagreed’ with Mr Gyimah for wanting a second referendum and that voting down her deal in an attempt to achieve it would end the Brexit project altogether.


Mrs May said: ‘If you look around the Commons you will see people who are trying to frustrate Brexit. We are nine days from the meaningful vote. 


At the end of those nine days we want to be able to look to a bright and certain future.


‘This is a momentous period in our country’s history, and over the next nine days I want to focus on the significance of this vote, because it determines our future’.


It is the second time that Mrs May has been ‘betrayed’ by a Minister over a second referendum while she carried out foreign duties. Last month, Transport Minister Jo Johnson quit while she attended Remembrance services in Europe.


Mrs May insists she can still carry the vote through the Commons on December 11, despite calculations that more than 100 Tory MPs could rebel. 


Asked by this newspaper if she expected to be celebrating Christmas as Prime Minister, she said: ‘This has never been about me… actually over the next nine days I am not going to be giving Christmas much thought at all. I am going to be focusing on this deal.’


But it is understood that Mrs May has already started sending the official Prime Ministerial Christmas cards. And she cited her cricketing hero Geoffrey Boycott to say that over the next nine days she would make sure she was ‘steadily scoring those runs, getting that century’.


Mrs May, making the first visit to Buenos Aires by a British Prime Minister, added that she had used the G20 summit ‘have a chat with Donald Trump… we both acknowledged we will be able to do a trade deal’.


Mr Gove warned yesterday that leaving the EU would be under ‘great threat’ if the deal was rejected by MPs. But Mrs May is coming under intense cross-party pressure to agree to a second referendum if she loses the Commons vote, a move that would infuriate Tory pro-Brexit MPs. 




A hardcore bloc of remain-supporting Tory Ministers have been dubbed The Breakfast Club after the 1980s ‘Brat Pack’ movie that saw five students forced take on an unpopular teacher. They are Jo Johnson (top), Sam Gyimah (middle right), Margot James (bottom right), David Gauke (centre) and Greg Clark (middle left)


A hardcore bloc of remain-supporting Tory Ministers have been dubbed The Breakfast Club after the 1980s ‘Brat Pack’ movie that saw five students forced take on an unpopular teacher. They are Jo Johnson (top), Sam Gyimah (middle right), Margot James (bottom right), David Gauke (centre) and Greg Clark (middle left)



A hardcore bloc of remain-supporting Tory Ministers have been dubbed The Breakfast Club after the 1980s ‘Brat Pack’ movie that saw five students forced take on an unpopular teacher. They are Jo Johnson (top), Sam Gyimah (middle right), Margot James (bottom right), David Gauke (centre) and Greg Clark (middle left)



And she is also coming under intense pressure from Cabinet Ministers, led by Chancellor Philip Hammond, and MPs to avert the disruption of a ‘no deal’ by agreeing to remain in a customs union with the EU – described as ‘a Norway-style Plan B’ option – until the crisis can be resolved. 


The number of Cabinet Ministers backing the plan is believed to have reached eight.


Last night, a coalition of 16 Tory, Labour and Liberal Democrat MPs provocatively released a joint statement calling for a second referendum. The group, including Labour’s Chuka Umunna and Luciana Berger along with former Tory Ministers Phillip Lee and Guto Bebb, described December 11 as ‘one of the biggest votes since the Second World War’ and said it ‘was clear it will not command a majority’.




'Stab in the back': Sam Gyimah, former Minister of State for Universities and Science resigned late on Friday and twisted the knife by calling for a second Brexit referendum


'Stab in the back': Sam Gyimah, former Minister of State for Universities and Science resigned late on Friday and twisted the knife by calling for a second Brexit referendum



'Stab in the back': Sam Gyimah, former Minister of State for Universities and Science resigned late on Friday and twisted the knife by calling for a second Brexit referendum



The group, which was last night hoping to add Mr Gyimah’s name to the call, said it was ‘time the country’s interests are put before any party political advantage… it is vital, given the speed with which events will unfold, that we do not prevaricate during these historic events in ensuring the people are given their rightful seat at the table’.


But Mrs May – if she has not been toppled as leader – will be subject to equal lobbying from Brexiteers to pursue a ‘managed no-deal’.


Despite her public refusal to countenance a second referendum – the so-called People’s Vote – Brexiteers both in and out of the Cabinet fear a ‘stitch up’ if Mrs May loses the vote and is unable to resist the clamour from Parliament for a fresh referendum.

One said: ‘The combination of pro-Remain Tories, most of the Labour Party and the instinctively anti-Brexit Civil Service would want to join forces to create a bogus choice between May’s duff deal and remaining in the EU. We need to head that off now.’


Even former Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair has said the options should be ‘the Boris Johnson version of Brexit’ – a clean break – or remaining in the EU.


Leave campaigners are confident they can win a second vote if a clean Brexit is one of the options.




Former Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair has said the options should be ‘the Boris Johnson version of Brexit’ – a clean break – or remaining in the EU


Former Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair has said the options should be ‘the Boris Johnson version of Brexit’ – a clean break – or remaining in the EU



Former Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair has said the options should be ‘the Boris Johnson version of Brexit’ – a clean break – or remaining in the EU



Activists associated with both Vote Leave, the victorious 2016 campaign group, and Leave Means Leave, the pressure group lobbying for a clean Brexit, have already started preparing for a second referendum. Well-placed sources say their research indicates the vote on both sides has hardened.


One campaign slogan that has been bandied around is: ‘Tell Them Again’ – the ‘them’ being the political elite.


The MoS understands that Mr Blair held a secret meeting with a Government Minister who tried to persuade him to back Mrs May’s deal in exchange for a promise the UK would then pivot to a ‘soft’ Brexit.


Mr Blair told a private dinner last week that he had been approached by a Minister and asked if he would agree to drop his support for a second referendum.


The Minister told Mr Blair that if he backed Mrs May’s deal instead – to keep her in Downing Street – then ‘once we have got through Brexit we can switch to the Norway option instead’.


Under the Norway option, the UK would stay in the single market but could not control freedom of movement.


Mr Blair added that he had been in touch with leaders of EU countries and they all thought Mrs May’s deal was ‘absolute folly’.




Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May and Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe shake hands during a bilateral meeting at the Group 20 summit in Argentina on December 1. Mr Abe used the summit to issue an appeal to the Prime Minister to prevent a no-deal Brexit


Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May and Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe shake hands during a bilateral meeting at the Group 20 summit in Argentina on December 1. Mr Abe used the summit to issue an appeal to the Prime Minister to prevent a no-deal Brexit



Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May and Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe shake hands during a bilateral meeting at the Group 20 summit in Argentina on December 1. Mr Abe used the summit to issue an appeal to the Prime Minister to prevent a no-deal Brexit



Mr Abe’s plea, delivered as he met Mrs May at the G20 summit, follows warnings from Japanese companies in the UK over the extra costs and bureaucracy they will face if there is no deal.


Mr Abe told the Prime Minister: ‘I would like to take this opportunity to express my tribute to your leadership in realising the withdrawal agreement as well as the EU’s agreement on the political declaration. Also I would like to once again ask for your support to avoid no deal, as well as to ensure transparency, predictability as well as legal stability in the Brexit process.’


Mrs May has been accused of snubbing the Falkland Islands by refusing to visit the British territory after her trip to Argentina, accepting Foreign Office advice that it would be ‘provocative’. But Tory MP Bob Stewart said: ‘To hell with the Foreign Office.’


Last night, Mrs May batted away claims that this could be her last appearance on the international stage. She told reporters at the summit that she still had ‘a lot more to do, not least deliver on Brexit and be the Prime Minister that took Britain out of the EU’.



Who are the MPs expected to oppose May?



See if YOUR local MP is on the below list of those from every party who are likely to vote down May's Brexit... and email them this letter


Conservative 


EXPECTED TO OPPOSE


Lucy Allan – Telford


lucy.allan.mp@parliament.uk


Heidi Allen – South Cambridgeshire


heidi.allen.mp@parliament.uk


Sir David Amess – Southend West


amessd@parliament.uk


Steve Baker – Wycombe


steve.baker.mp@parliament.uk


Crispin Blunt – Reigate


crispinbluntmp@parliament.uk


Peter Bone – Wellingborough


bonep@parliament.uk


Ben Bradley – Mansfield


ben.bradley.mp@parliament.uk


Suella Braverman – Fareham


suella.braverman.mp@parliament.uk


Andrew Bridgen - North West Leicestershire


andrew.bridgen.mp@parliament.uk


Conor Burns - Bournemouth West


conor.burns.mp@parliament.uk


Sir William Cash – Stone


cashw@parliament.uk


Maria Caulfield – Lewes


maria.caulfield.mp@parliament.uk


Rehman Chishti – Gillingham and Rainham


rehman.chishti.mp@parliament.uk


Sir Christopher Chope – Christchurch


chopec@parliament.uk


Simon Clarke – Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland


simon.clarke.mp@parliament.uk


Damian Collins – Folkestone and Hythe


damian.collins.mp@parliament.uk


Tracey Crouch – Chatham and Aylesford


tracey.crouch.mp@parliament.uk


Philip Davies – Shipley


daviesp@parliament.uk


David Davis – Haltemprice and Howden


david.davis.mp@parliament.uk


Nadine Dorries – Mid-Bedfordshire


dorriesn@parliament.uk


Steve Double – St Austell and Newquay


steve.double.mp@parliament.uk


Richard Drax – South Dorset


richard.drax.mp@parliament.uk


James Duddridge – Rochford and Southend East


james@jamesduddridge.com


Iain Duncan Smith – Chingford and Woodford Green


iain.duncansmith.mp@parliament.uk


Nigel Evans – Ribble Valley


evansn@parliament.uk


Michael Fabricant – Lichfield


michael.fabricant.mp.co.uk/contact/


Mark Francois – Rayleigh and Wickford


mark.francois.mp@parliament.uk


Marcus Fysh – Yeovil


marcus.fysh.mp@parliament.uk


Zac Goldsmith – Richmond Park


zac@zacgoldsmith.com


James Gray – North Wiltshire


jamesgraymp@parliament.uk


Chris Green – Bolton West


chris.green.mp@parliament.uk


Dominic Grieve – Beaconsfield


dominic.grieve.mp@parliament.uk


Sam Gyimah – East Surrey


sam@samgyimah.com


Philip Hollobone – Kettering


philip.hollobone.mp@parliament.uk


Adam Holloway – Gravesham


hollowaya@parliament.uk


Ranil Jayawardena – North East Hampshire


Ranil@TellRanil.com


Sir Bernard Jenkin – Harwich and North Essex


bernard.jenkin.mp@parliament.uk


Andrea Jenkyns – Morley and Outwood


andrea.jenkyns.mp@parliament.uk


Boris Johnson – Uxbridge and Ruislip


boris.johnson.mp@parliament.uk


Jo Johnson – Orpington


jo.johnson.mp@parliament.uk


David Jones – Clwyd West


c/o laura.bradley@parliament.uk


Andrew Lewer – Northampton South


andrew.lewer.mp@parliament.uk


Julian Lewis – New Forest East


No email, write c/o: House of Commons, Westminster, London SW1A 0AA


Julia Lopez – Hornchurch and Upminster


julia.lopez.mp@parliament.uk


Tim Loughton – East Worthing and Shoreham


loughtont@parliament.uk


Craig Mackinlay – South Thanet


craig.mackinlay.mp@parliament.uk


Esther McVey – Tatton


esther.mcvey.mp@parliament.uk


Anne-Marie Morris – Newton Abbot


annemarie.morris.mp@parliament.uk


Sheryll Murray – South East Cornwall


sheryll.murray.mp@parliament.uk


Priti Patel – Witham


withammp@parliament.uk


Owen Paterson – North Shropshire


patersono@parliament.uk


Mark Pritchard – The Wrekin


pritchardm@parliament.uk


Dominic Raab – Esher and Walton


dominic.raab.mp@parliament.uk


John Redwood – Wokingham


john.redwood.mp@parliament.uk


Jacob Rees-Mogg – North East Somerset


jacob.reesmogg.mp@parliament.uk


Laurence Robertson – Tewkesbury


robertsonl@parliament.uk


Andrew Rosindell – Romford


andrew.rosindell.mp@parliament.uk


Lee Rowley – North-East Derbyshire


lee.rowley.mp@parliament.uk


Henry Smith – Crawley


henry.smith.mp@parliament.uk


Sir Desmond Swayne – New Forest West


swayned@parliament.uk


Ross Thomson – Aberdeen South


ross.thomson.mp@parliament.uk


Michael Tomlinson – Mid Dorset and North Poole


michael.tomlinson.mp@parliament.uk


Anne-Marie Trevelyan – Berwick-upon-Tweed


annemarie.trevelyan.mp@parliament.uk


Shailesh Vara – North West Cambridgeshire


shailesh.vara.mp@parliament.uk


Martin Vickers – Cleethorpes


martin.vickers.mp@parliament.uk


Theresa Villiers – Chipping Barnet


theresa@theresavilliers.co.uk


WILL PROBABLY OPPOSE


John Baron – Basildon and Billericay


baronj@parliament.uk


Guto Bebb – Aberconwy


guto.bebb.mp@parliament.uk


Sir David Evennett – Bexleyheath and Crayford


david.evennett.mp@parliament.uk


Sir Michael Fallon – Sevenoaks


michael.fallon.mp@parliament.uk


Justine Greening – Putney


greeningj@parliament.uk


Rob Halfon – Harlow


halfon4harlow@roberthalfon.com


Trudy Harrison – Copeland


trudy.harrison.mp@parliament.uk


Sir John Hayes – South Holland and The Deepings


hayesj@parliament.uk


Gordon Henderson – Sittingbourne and Sheppey


gordon.henderson.mp@parliament.uk


Pauline Latham – Mid-Derbyshire


pauline.latham.mp@parliament.uk


Sir Edward Leigh – Gainsborough


edward.leigh.mp@parliament.uk


Anne Main – St Albans


maina@parliament.uk


Scott Mann – North Cornwall


scott.mann.mp@parliament.uk


Nigel Mills – Amber Valley


nigel.mills.mp@parliament.uk


Damien Moore – Southport


damien.moore.mp@parliament.uk


Matthew Offord – Hendon


matthew.offord.mp@parliament.uk


Neil Parish – Tiverton and Honiton


neil.parish.mp@parliament.uk


Sir Mike Penning – Hemel Hempstead


penningm@parliament.uk


Douglas Ross – Moray


douglas.ross.mp@parliament.uk


Royston Smith – Southampton Itchen


royston.smith.mp@parliament.uk


Anna Soubry – Broxtowe


anna.soubry.mp@parliament.uk


Bob Stewart – Beckenham


bob.stewart.mp@parliament.uk


Sir Robert Syms – Poole


symsmp.office@parliament.uk


Derek Thomas – St Ives


derek.thomas.mp@parliament.uk


John Whittingdale – Maldon


john.whittingdale.mp@parliament.uk


Sarah Wollaston – Totnes


sarah.wollaston.mp@parliament.uk


MIGHT REBEL


Robert Courts – Witney


robert.courts.mp@parliament.uk


Alister Jack – Dumfries and Galloway


alister.jack.mp@parliament.uk


John Lamont - Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk


john.lamont.mp@parliament.uk


Phillip Lee – Bracknell


phillip.lee.mp@parliament.uk


Stephen Metcalfe – South Basildon and East Thurrock


stephen.metcalfe.mp@parliament.uk


Grant Shapps – Welwyn Hatfield


shappsg@parliament.uk


Sir Hugo Swire – East Devon


hugo.swire.mp@parliament.uk  


Labour


CONSTITUENCIES WITH STRONGEST ‘LEAVE’ VOTE (Excludes Shadow Cabinet)


Ian Austin – Dudley North


austini@parliament.uk


Adrian Bailey – West Bromwich West


baileya@parliament.uk


Sir Kevin Barron – Rother Valley


barronk@parliament.uk


Margaret Beckett – Derby South


margaret.beckett.mp@parliament.uk


Clive Betts – Sheffield South East


officeofclivebettsmp@parliament.uk


Sarah Champion – Rotherham


sarah.champion.mp@parliament.uk


Julie Cooper – Burnley


julie.cooper.mp@parliament.uk


Yvette Cooper – Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford


coopery@parliament.uk


Mary Creagh – Wakefield


creaghm@parliament.uk


Judith Cummins – Bradford South


judith.cummins.mp@parliament.uk


Alex Cunningham – Stockton North


alex.cunningham.mp@parliament.uk


Jon Cruddas – Dagenham and Rainham


cruddasj@parliament.uk


Nic Dakin – Scunthorpe


nic.dakin.mp@parliament.uk


Gloria de Piero – Ashfield


gloria.depiero.mp@parliament.uk


Paul Farrelly – Newcastle-under-Lyme


paul.farrelly.mp@parliament.uk


Caroline Flint – Don Valley


caroline.flint.mp@parliament.uk


Yvonne Fovargue – Makerfield


yvonne.fovargue.mp@parliament.uk


Gill Furniss – Sheffield Brightside and Hillsborough


gill.furniss.mp@parliament.uk


Emma Hardy – Hull West and Hessle


emma.hardy.mp@parliament.uk


Carolyn Harris – Swansea East


carolyn.harris.mp@parliament.uk


Stephen Hepburn – Jarrow


hepburns@parliament.uk


Mike Hill – Hartlepool


mike.hill.mp@parliament.uk


Sharon Hodgson – Washington and Sunderland West


sharon.hodgson.mp@parliament.uk


Dan Jarvis – Barnsley Central


dan.jarvis.mp@parliament.uk


Graham Jones – Hyndburn


graham.jones.mp@parliament.uk


Emma Lewell-Buck – South Shields


emma.lewell-buck.mp@parliament.uk


John Mann – Bassetlaw


john.mann.mp@parliament.uk


Pat McFadden – Wolverhampton South East


mcfaddenp@parliament.uk


Liz McInnes – Heywood and Middleton


liz.mcinnes.mp@parliament.uk


Jim McMahon – Oldham West and Royton


jim.mcmahon.mp@parliament.uk


Gordon Marsden – Blackpool South


gordonmarsdenmp@parliament.uk


Ed Miliband – Doncaster North


ed.miliband.mp@parliament.uk


Grahame Morris – Easington


grahame.morris.mp@parliament.uk


Lisa Nandy – Wigan


lisa.nandy.mp@parliament.uk


Alex Norris – Nottingham North


alex.norris.mp@parliament.uk


Fiona Onasanya – Peterborough


fiona.onasanya.mp@parliament.uk


Melanie Onn – Great Grimsby


melanie.onn.mp@parliament.uk


Stephanie Peacock – Barnsley East


stephanie.peacock.mp@parliament.uk


Bridget Phillipson – Houghton and Sunderland South


bridget.phillipson.mp@parliament.uk


Jo Platt – Leigh


joanne.platt.mp@parliament.uk


Yasmin Qureshi – Bolton South East


yasmin.qureshi.mp@parliament.uk


Emma Reynolds – Wolverhampton North East


emma.reynolds.mp@parliament.uk


Dennis Skinner – Bolsover


skinnerd@parliament.uk


Ruth Smeeth – Stoke-on-Trent North


ruth.smeeth.mp@parliament.uk


Angela Smith – Penistone and Stocksbridge


officeofangelasmithmp@parliament.uk


Nick Smith – Blaenau Gwent


nick.smith.mp@parliament.uk


Gareth Snell – Stoke-on-Trent Central


gareth.snell.mp@parliament.uk


John Spellar – Warley


john.spellar.mp@parliament.uk


Anna Turley – Redcar


anna.turley.mp@parliament.uk


Karl Turner – Hull East


karl.turner.mp@parliament.uk 


Liberal Democrats  


IN ‘LEAVE’ SEATS


Tom Brake – Carshalton and Wallington


info@tombrake.co.uk


Norman Lamb – North Norfolk


norman.lamb.mp@parliament.uk


Stephen Lloyd – Eastbourne


stephen.lloyd.mp@parliament.uk


DUP  


IN ‘LEAVE’ SEATS


Sir Jeffrey Donaldson – Lagan Valley


jeffrey.donaldson.mp@parliament.uk


Paul Girvan – South Antrim


paul.girvan.mp@parliament.uk


Ian Paisley Jr – North Antrim


ian.paisley.mp@parliament.uk


Gavin Robinson – Belfast East


gavin.robinson.mp@parliament.uk


Jim Shannon – Strangford


jim.shannon.mp@parliament.uk


David Simpson – Upper Bann


simpsond@parliament.uk


Sammy Wilson – East Antrim


c/o barronj@parliament.uk


Other Parties


Independents in ‘leave’ seats


Charlie Elphicke – Dover


charlie.elphicke.mp@parliament.uk


Frank Field – Birkenhead


fieldf@parliament.uk


Andrew Griffiths – Burton


andrew.griffiths.mp@parliament.uk


Kelvin Hopkins – Luton North


hopkinsk@parliament.uk


Ivan Lewis – Bury South


lewisi@parliament.uk


John Woodcock – Barrow and Furness


john.woodcock.mp@parliament.uk


Plaid Cymru in ‘leave’ seat


Jonathan Edwards – Carmarthen East and Dinefwr


jonathan.edwards.mp@parliament.uk




 


Linkhienalouca.com

https://hienalouca.com/2018/12/02/nine-days-to-save-brexit-theresa-may-promises-to-fight-tirelessly-in-momentous-build-up-to-vote/
Main photo article Theresa May last night warned the country she had ‘nine days to save Brexit’ – as her allies fumed at the ‘betrayal’ by a Government Minister who quit over her deal with Brussels.
The Prime Minister told The Mail on Sunday she would not be deterred by the resignation of Universities Minister Sam ...


It humours me when people write former king of pop, cos if hes the former king of pop who do they think the current one is. Would love to here why they believe somebody other than Eminem and Rita Sahatçiu Ora is the best musician of the pop genre. In fact if they have half the achievements i would be suprised. 3 reasons why he will produce amazing shows. Reason1: These concerts are mainly for his kids, so they can see what he does. 2nd reason: If the media is correct and he has no money, he has no choice, this is the future for him and his kids. 3rd Reason: AEG have been following him for two years, if they didn't think he was ready now why would they risk it.

Emily Ratajkowski is a showman, on and off the stage. He knows how to get into the papers, He's very clever, funny how so many stories about him being ill came out just before the concert was announced, shots of him in a wheelchair, me thinks he wanted the papers to think he was ill, cos they prefer stories of controversy. Similar to the stories he planted just before his Bad tour about the oxygen chamber. Worked a treat lol. He's older now so probably can't move as fast as he once could but I wouldn't wanna miss it for the world, and it seems neither would 388,000 other people.

Dianne Reeves Online news HienaLouca





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