I Hopes UK will Leave EU With a Deal- May

Theresa May
has said she "sincerely hopes" the UK will leave the EU with a deal
and she is still "working on" ensuring Parliament's agreement.
Arriving in
Brussels, she said that she had "personal regret" over her request to
delay Brexit, but said it will allow time for MPs to make a "final
choice".
At the EU
summit she will try to persuade the other 27 countries to delay the UK's exit
beyond 29 March.
Meanwhile,
Jeremy Corbyn said his talks in Brussels were "very constructive".
On
Wednesday, Mrs May made a speech blaming the delay on MPs and telling
the nation she was "on their side".
French
President Emmanuel Macron has warned that if MPs vote down Mrs May's EU
withdrawal agreement next week, the UK will leave without a deal.
"In the
case of a negative British vote then we'd be heading to a no deal. We all know
it. And it's essential to be clear in these days and moments," said Mr
Macron, as he arrived at the summit.
On her
arrival in Brussels, Mrs May said: "A short extension gives us that
opportunity to decide to leave the European Union, to deliver on that result of
that referendum and I sincerely hope that will be with a negotiated deal."
She added:
"I'm still working on ensuring that Parliament can agree a deal so that we
can leave in an orderly way."
Earlier, speaking
in the German Parliament, Angela Merkel said the EU could meet Mrs May's
request to delay Brexit if in the next week there was a "positive
vote" on the withdrawal agreement in the UK Parliament.
The German
Chancellor said European elections at the end of May would have to be
considered during discussions on the suggested extension deadline of 30 June,
adding: "But of course we can certainly talk about a short term
extension."
Beware the
reports of "huge" differences between EU leaders when it comes to a
Brexit delay and the way forward in the coming days.
Take
Germany's Angela Merkel and France's Emmanuel Macron: There are big differences
in their political styles.
And big
differences in the message they want to send their own domestic audiences (tough
for France; open for Germany) when talking about Brexit.
But like
most EU leaders - irritation, frustration and Brexit fatigue aside - they would
rather avoid a costly no-deal Brexit.
Chancellor
Merkel, like European Council President Donald Tusk has announced she will work
"until the last hours" to try to avoid it.
And while EU
leaders have ruled out re-opening the Brexit withdrawal agreement and the
"backstop" text, you can bet they'll discuss a longer Brexit delay at
their summit today.
They will
also discuss the short delay requested by Theresa May, in case - as the EU
fears - chaos and division continue next week in Westminster.
The UK is
set to leave the EU next Friday unless the law is changed. The current default
position for leaving is without a withdrawal agreement.
Mrs May
agreed a deal with the EU, but MPs have rejected it twice.
She has
asked the EU for a short extension of the two-year Brexit process until 30
June, but any extension needs to be agreed to by all EU members.
European
Council President Donald Tusk said he believed the EU would agree to
a short extension, but this would only be if Mrs May's deal is signed off by
MPs next week. Another EU summit next week could be called in an emergency if
needed, he said.
Mr Tusk said
the "question remains open" as to how long a delay the other EU
leaders would support.
Taoiseach
(Irish PM) Leo Varadkar said that he appreciated the situation in London was
"somewhat chaotic" and for that reason "we need to cut the
entire British establishment a little bit of slack on this".
He said
there was "openness to an extension" as "nobody wants no
deal".
In her
speech from Number 10 on Wednesday evening, Mrs May insisted she would not be
willing to postpone Brexit any further than 30 June, despite appeals from some
MPs.
She added:
"Of this I am absolutely sure. You, the public, have had enough.
"You
are tired of the infighting, tired of the political games and the arcane
procedural rows, tired of MPs talking about nothing else but Brexit when you
have real concerns about our children's schools, our National Health Service,
knife crime.
"You
want this stage of the Brexit process to be over and done with. I agree. I am
on your side."
She said it
was now up to MPs to decide whether they wanted to leave with her deal, no deal
or not to leave at all. But she warned that the latter option could cause
"irreparable damage to public trust" in politicians.
Foreign
Secretary Jeremy Hunt said the UK would be faced with three options if Mrs
May's deal was defeated again next week: revoke Article 50; leave without a
deal; or a longer extension could be granted at an emergency EU summit, but
with "onerous conditions".
"The
choice that we have now is one of resolving this issue or extreme
unpredictability," Mr Hunt told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
He also
defended the prime minister's statement, saying Mrs May was under
"extraordinary pressure" and MPs have a "special
responsibility" in a hung Parliament.
Labour
leader Jeremy Corbyn said talks with EU Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier and
European Commission secretary general Martin Selmayr in Brussels were
"very constructive".
"Our
determination is to prevent a no-deal exit from the European Union next
Friday," he said.
"We are
therefore looking for alternatives and building a majority in Parliament that
can agree on a future constructive economic relationship with the European
Union."
He said he
had been "reaching out" to colleagues from all parties in Parliament
on this.
FROM .bbc.com/news/uk-politics-
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