Theresa May caved into demands from 15 Brexiteer ministers today and gave permission for them to vote for a rival no deal plan tonight.
The Prime Minister is fighting for her political life after being humiliated by the Commons last night and the rebel ministers threaten to quit en mass.
Mrs May had promised a free vote tonight on her motion that says there should not be a no deal Brexit on March 29 - but that the option must stay on the table.
She is ordering MPs to vote against most amendments but relented today over an effort to unite the warring Tory party.
Brexiteers have joined forces with Remain Tories to say Mrs May should offer to 'buy' a transition period after March 29 in return for the divorce bill as an alternative to No Deal. The plan is known as the 'Malthouse Compromise'.
EU negotiator Michel Barnier already dismissed the plan this morning in a speech to the European Parliament in Strasbourg - prompting Remain MPs to say it is a defacto vote for crashing out on March 29.
The other main amendment in tonight's votes is to rule out no deal Brext in all circumstances - something Remain ministers may want to back.
Brexiteer ministers have warned Theresa May (pictured leaving No 10 today) to let them back a 'Plan C' Brexit tonight or face 15 resignations they claims 'could be the end of her'
Brexiteers (including Steve Baker left) have joined forces with Remain Tories (from second left Nicky Morgan, Damian Green and Simon Hart) to say Mrs May should offer to 'buy' a transition period after March 29 in return for the divorce bill as an alternative to No Deal
EU negotiator Michel Barnier already dismissed the plan this morning in a speech to the European Parliament in Strasbourg (pictured)
Despite Mr Barnier's stance Eurosceptic ministers have demanded the right to vote for the plan anyway.
One minister told the Telegraph: 'The Remainers have had it all their own way, they've breached collective responsibility without any sanction.
'We've been loyal and look where it's got us.'
The delegation of 15 ministers is meeting Mrs May at 4.30pm and one warned: 'We will all go. It would be the end of her.'
Senior Brexiteer Steve Baker, a key figure in the hardline European Research Group, said the new version of the Malthouse Compromise would 'throw three safety nets' around leaving the EU without a Withdrawal Agreement.
He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that plan A remained putting 'alternative arrangements' in place to replace the backstop in the Withdrawal Agreement.
The second element was to 'buy' an implementation period 'so they get about £10 billion a year and we all get a transition arrangement'.
The third was offering 'standstill' arrangements with the EU to provide a third way to have a smooth exit.
Brexiteer ringleader Jacob Rees-Mogg has also backed the so-called Malthouse amendment ahead of tonight's no deal votes
The EU's Michel Barnier has repeatedly stressed that a transition arrangement could only be offered if there was a formal Withdrawal Agreement, but Mr Baker said 'negotiability is a dynamic concept'.
He repeated today there will be no further offer from Brussels apart from the deal already on the table, and it is now 'the responsibility of the UK' to suggest a way forward.
He told the European Parliament: 'What will their choice be, what will be the line they will take? That is the question we need a clear answer to now. That is the question that has to be answered before a decision on a possible further extension.
'Why would we extend these discussions? The discussion on Article 50 is done and dusted. We have the Withdrawal Agreement. It is there.
'That is the question asked and we are waiting for an answer to that.'
Mr Barnier added: 'The risk of no-deal has never been higher. That is the risk of an exit - even by accident - by the UK from the EU in a disorderly fashion.'
In other developments today, Brexiteers today insisted that a No Deal Brexit would be 'good news' for Britain despite ministers revealing alarming new tariffs that would be charged on products imported from the EU.
The new import taxes will be imposed on items from the continent including cars, meat and cheese if the UK crashes out of the bloc on March 29 - but will not apply in Northern Ireland.
But excited members of the Tory ERG group led by Jacob Rees-Mogg were quick to point out that the arrangements would ensure nine out of ten global imports would land in Britain completely tax-free without an EU deal.
Tory Brexiteer and ERG chairman Steve Baker said today: 'No Deal is nothing to be scared of – it's just Brexit with many mini-deals' while ERG spokesman Sir Bill Cash, who is also Chairman of the European Scrutiny Committee, said these tariffs will help the British public 'enormously' making 'imports much cheaper' from non-EU countries.
At the moment products from EU countries such as Germany and France can be imported into Britain without any charges under the single market, but if Britain leaves without a deal the Government will have to introduce new import taxes.
However in a seemingly confusing loophole in No Deal plan, Northern Ireland's border would remain open at least 'temporarily' and goods entering from the Republic would not face tariffs to preserve the Good Friday agreement.
The situation will raise fears that the Northern Irish border could become a smuggling route for EU products.
Under the No Deal plan revealed this morning, 87 per cent of products would be subject to zero tariffs in an effort to stop price spikes and kick-start trade with Britain from across the world. The current figure is 80 per cent.
Critics have said that a No Deal would be a 'disaster' for Britain who would be 'blocked' from trading with its closest trading partner - the EU.
CBI director-general Carolyn Fairbairn said today: 'This tells us everything that is wrong with a no-deal. What we are hearing is the biggest change in terms of trade this country has faced since the mid-19th century being imposed on this country with no consultation with business, no time to prepare. This is a sledgehammer for our economy.'
Labour's opposition - and the deal's rejection by 75 Brexiteer Tory rebels alongside the DUP - sunk Mrs May's motion last night with Boris Johnson saying Mrs May should put her deal to bed
The new tariff regime would be applied temporarily in an attempt to minimise disruption to the economy and stop price hikes.
But ministers said products from the EU including beef, pork, chicken, butter, cheese and fish would also be subject to import taxes expected to push up prices in the supermarkets from March 29 if there is no agreement.
Cars from the EU would be subject to a a 10.6 per tax on the cost of all 'fully finished' vehicles - making the prices of an average vehicle surge by £1,500.
After the decisive defeat of Theresa May's Brexit deal last night, she has given MPs a free vote at 7pm tonight on whether they want to leave the EU without a deal. She has indicated that she will vote against leaving without a deal.
Among the 13 per cent of imports - most from the EU - which will be subject to tariffs, will be:
- Beef, lamb, pork and poultry and some dairy products including butter and cheese - in order to protect UK farmers and producers from cheap imports;
- A number of tariffs on finished new cars, vans, lorries and buses imported from the EU - but charges will not apply to vehicle parts imported from the EU to prevent disruption to supply chains;
- Ceramics, fertiliser and fuel, where tariffs protect UK producers against unfair practices like dumping and state subsidies;
- Goods including bananas, raw cane sugar and certain kinds of fish, where tariffs are used to permit preferential access to the UK market for developing countries.
On the new tariff regime, Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay told Today it was a 'modest liberalisation' of trade, adding: 'This is for a short term while we engage with business and see what the real-term consequences are'.
But British Retail Consortium chief executive Helen Dickinson hit back: 'Even as the Brexit clock approaches midnight, MPs continue to squabble.
'Yet it is the public who will feel the impact of a No Deal Brexit – tariffs, non-tariff barriers and currency depreciation will all push up costs and reduce the choice on the shelves we currently enjoy.
'Businesses are exasperated by the lack of clarity over their future trading arrangements'.
Link hienalouca.com
https://hienalouca.com/2019/03/13/fifteen-brexiteer-ministers-threaten-to-quit-and-force-may-out-of-her-job/
Main photo article Theresa May caved into demands from 15 Brexiteer ministers today and gave permission for them to vote for a rival no deal plan tonight.
The Prime Minister is fighting for her political life after being humiliated by the Commons last night and the rebel ministers threaten to quit en mass.
Mrs May...
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 US News HienaLouca
https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2019/03/13/11/10927358-6803599-image-a-14_1552476043456.jpg
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