Theresa May Defends Brexit Deal Amid Criticism From MPs
Theresa May
has defended her proposed Brexit deal in the Commons in the face of sustained
criticism from the opposition and many Conservative MPs.
She said the
deal delivered on the result of the EU referendum - and MPs will get to vote on
it on 11 December.
But she
admitted she was not "entirely happy" with the "backstop"
contingency plan to avoid a hard border in Ireland.
Jeremy
Corbyn said "ploughing on" with a deal opposed by the public and MPs
was an "act of national self-harm".
The Labour
leader suggested Parliament would have "little choice" but to reject
the deal when MPs vote on it.
A host of
former Tory cabinet ministers, including Iain Duncan Smith, Boris Johnson, Owen
Paterson, Michael Fallon and Dominic Grieve, also said the deal was
unsatisfactory, during the two-and-half hour debate.
Mrs May
faces an uphill struggle to persuade MPs to accept the terms of the withdrawal
agreement - and a political declaration on future relations between the EU and
UK - approved by EU leaders on Sunday.
Mrs May said
there had been "give and take" in the 19-month negotiations but the
final agreement "delivered for the British people" by regaining
control of laws, money and borders.
She
acknowledged concerns over arrangements to avoid the return of physical checks
on the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, which could
see the UK entering a customs arrangement with the EU - known as the
"backstop".
The
"backstop" was an "insurance policy no-one wants to use,"
Mrs May told MPs, and she insisted the UK would have the right to determine
whether it came into force if the UK's future relationship was not settled by
the end of 2020, as she hoped it would.
A backstop
of some kind would be required, she said, due to the UK's obligation to uphold
the Good Friday Agreement, the Northern Ireland peace deal signed 20 years ago,
adding "there is no deal that comes without a backstop and without a
backstop there is no deal".
She also
insisted she had stood firm in the face of repeated EU attempts to link access
to British waters for their fishermen to future trade arrangements, amid claims
from the SNP and others that her deal had "sold out" Scotland's
fishermen.
The PM also
said she regretted saying in a speech last week that Brexit would prevent EU
migrants "jumping the queue". The comments sparked an angry backlash
from EU citizens living in the UK.
The Labour
leader said Mrs May had brought home a "botched deal" that would
"leave the UK worse off" and that "ploughing on is not stoic, it
is an act of national self-harm".
"This
deal it is not a plan for Britain's future," he added and that was why MPs
had "little choice" but to reject it.
Caroline
Flint, one of the few Labour MPs who has signalled she could vote for the deal,
urged Mrs May and Mr Corbyn to hold face-to-face talks to reach an
accommodation acceptable to both parties.
Tory
backbencher Mark Francois was among a host of MPs to urge PM to think again,
claiming the agreement was "as dead as a dodo" and "would not
get through" Parliament.
"The
House of Commons has never surrendered to anyone," he said. "It won't
start now."
And former
defence secretary Sir Michael Fallon, previously regarded as a loyalist, said
it would be a "huge gamble" for the UK to "surrender our vote
and our veto without any firm commitment to frictionless trade" outside
the EU.
Former
Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said it was "hard to see" how the
deal could provide certainty to business when cabinet ministers were saying
different things about what they wanted.
The SNP's
Iain Blackford said the agreement was "full of ifs and buts" which
would result in Scottish fishermen being "sold out" while the Lib Dem
leader Sir Vince Cable and Green Party MP Caroline Lucas both called for
another referendum.
Theresa May
told MPs her plan was in the national interest, delivering both on the
referendum result while protecting the economy.
But if this
debate is a taste of things to come, the prime minister is in big trouble.
One MP after
another, Remainers and Leavers alike, and across all parties spoke out against
Mrs May's plan.
Indeed
rarely can a prime minister have received such a mauling. Mrs May now has just
over two weeks to try to rally support in Parliament.
Asked repeatedly
by MPs what the "Plan B" was if she lost the vote, she avoided a
direct answer.
FROM bbc.com/news/uk-politics
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