Brexit Deal in Crisis After 2 U.K. Cabinet Ministers Quit
Theresa May of Britain spoke about her plan for leaving the European Union after two cabinet ministers quit her government and others in her own party showed a lack of support.
LONDON
— Prime Minister Theresa May of Britain faced a deep political crisis
on Thursday after two cabinet ministers quit her government, including
Dominic Raab, her chief negotiator on withdrawal from the European Union
— decisions that threaten to wreck not only her plans for the exit but
also her leadership.
The surprise
resignation of Mr. Raab on Thursday morning followed a tense, five-hour
meeting of the cabinet the previous day, during which ministers reluctantly agreed to sign off on Mrs. May’s draft plans for departure from the European Union, a process commonly known as Brexit.
Mr.
Raab’s departure was not only unexpected but also deeply damaging to
Mrs. May’s authority, increasing the risk that she might face a
leadership challenge from rebel lawmakers inside her own Conservative
Party.
Shortly after his announcement, Esther McVey, the work and pensions secretary, resigned, adding to the turmoil.
At
a news conference at the end of the day, Mrs. May, projecting her
customary confidence, insisted that she was not worried about the
prospects for the deal or her own political fortunes.
“Leadership is about taking the right decisions, not the easy ones,” she said. “Am I going to see this through? Yes.”
The
pound, an indicator of stability amid the Brexit debate, fell sharply
on the news that Mr. Raab had resigned and dropped again when the
pensions minister stepped down. The currency, which was worth close to
$1.30 before Mr. Raab’s resignation, dipped as low as $1.2753 by
midmorning and continued to have an unsteady day.
After sliding in the minutes before Mrs. May started her speech, the currency rose to $1.2786 as she talked.
The
crisis is a grave one for Mrs. May, who knew even before the
resignations that she would struggle to win Parliamentary approval for
her draft agreement. She addressed the House of Commons on Thursday
morning to sell her deal and for nearly three hours took questions on
the deal, nearly all of them ranging from skeptical to outright hostile.
“What
we agreed yesterday was not the final deal,” she said. “It is a draft
treaty that means that we will leave the E.U. in a smooth and orderly
way on the 29th of March, 2019, and which sets the framework for a
future relationship that delivers in our national interest.”
An
investment manager watching Mrs. May speak to the House of Commons. The
pound dropped as much as 1.5 percent against the dollar on Thursday.
She
added that the deal “delivers in ways that many said could simply not
be done.” It would put in place a transitional relationship with the
European Union through the end of 2020, while a permanent arrangement is
negotiated, but the transition period could be extended.
Jeremy
Corbyn, the Labour Party leader, called Mrs. May’s agreement “a leap in
the dark, an ill-defined deal by a never-defined date.” The continued
uncertainty about Britain’s relationship with Europe, lasting at least
another two years and possibly much longer, will accelerate the exodus
of businesses and investment that is already underway, he said.
“Parliament cannot, and I believe will not,” accept the arrangement, he added.
That
view was echoed by Ian Blackford, a lawmaker from the Scottish National
Party, who said the prime minister was “trying to sell us a deal that
is already dead in the water.”
Reflecting
the cool response to Mrs. May’s plan and the talk of a leadership
challenge, Laura Kuenssberg, the political editor of the BBC, asked at
the prime minister’s news conference, “Is it not the case now that you
are in office, but you’re not really in power?” Mrs. May did not answer
directly, sticking firmly to her talking points about the deal and
declining to dwell on the politics around it.
The
lack of support for the agreement from lawmakers in both major parties
had kept the pound down. “What we need to see is ministers who have not
resigned come out and back the deal,” said Jordan Rochester, a foreign
exchange strategist at Nomura Securities. “It’s not the P.R. campaign
we’ve expected.”
Still, the lack of
clarity kept the pound from collapsing, Mr. Rochester said, though calls
for a vote of no confidence in Mrs. May did not help. Despite a series
of negative headlines through the day, he noted, the pound did not
continue to fall.
“There is a buyer out there,” he said. “It’s guys thinking, ‘It’s bad now, but it increases the chance of remain.’ ”
European
Union officials lay low on Thursday, declining to comment on the drama
across the English Channel, or to speculate about what would happen if
Mrs. May were ousted or if Parliament rejected the deal. But speaking on
the condition of anonymity, they said the union had gone a long way to
satisfy the prime minister’s demands that there be no hard border
between Ireland and Northern Ireland, and that Britain continue to have
frictionless trade with the bloc.
Negotiators “think it is the best we can do collectively with the constraints that we have on both sides,” one official said.
Mrs.
May made much the same point: “Nobody has any alternative proposal that
both delivers on the referendum and ensures there is no hard border
between Northern Ireland and Ireland.”
Dominic Raab’s resignation increases the risk that Mrs. May might face a leadership challenge.
Although
a hard-line supporter of Brexit, Mr. Raab had been a core member of the
cabinet, and his presence had reassured other hard-line lawmakers. He
served as Brexit secretary for barely four months, succeeding David
Davis, who also resigned, because he felt that Mrs. May was not taking a
hard enough line in negotiations.
In
his letter of resignation, Mr. Raab said that he could not “reconcile
the terms of the proposed deal with the promises we made.”
Today, I have resigned as Brexit Secretary. I cannot in good conscience support the terms proposed for our deal with the EU. Here is my letter to the PM explaining my reasons, and my enduring respect for her. pic.twitter.com/tf5CUZnnUz— Dominic Raab (@DominicRaab) November 15, 2018
Ms. McVey’s departure, though damaging, was less of a surprise.
Another
cabinet minister, Penny Mordaunt, the international development
secretary, was also reportedly reconsidering her position after a
cabinet debate on Wednesday that Mrs. May described, diplomatically, as
“impassioned.” As many as 10 cabinet ministers were reported to have
voiced reservations.
Iain Duncan
Smith, a leading Conservative supporter of Brexit and former party
leader, told the BBC that the effect of Mr. Raab’s resignation would be
“devastating,” because it suggested that the Brexit secretary’s concerns
had been ignored, despite his pivotal position in government and in
withdrawal negotiations.
Such is the
unhappiness from around the party at Mrs. May’s draft deal that the
calculation of those who want to oust her might change.
It
would take written requests from 48 Conservative lawmakers to secure a
vote of no confidence in Mrs. May. Though the hard-line pro-Brexit
faction has that number, it has held back so far because it does not
believe that it has enough support to topple her.
To oust her as prime minister would require a majority of Conservative lawmakers — at least 158 — voting to force her out.
On
the floor of Parliament on Thursday, Mrs. May faced a torrent of
criticism, much of it from members of her own party. One Conservative
lawmaker, Julian Lewis, described her deal with Europe as “a ‘Hotel
California’ Brexit deal which ensures that we can never truly leave the
E.U.”
Mr. Rees-Mogg, the Conservative
Brexit hard-liner, said that the prime minister’s promises and actions
“no longer match,” and asked why he should not join those demanding a
vote of no confidence. He later confirmed that he had done just that.
Britons
voted to quit the European Union in a 2016 referendum, but since then
the Conservatives have been split between those who want to keep some
close economic ties to the bloc, to protect the economy, and others who
want a cleaner break.
An
abandoned customs post on the border between Ireland and Northern
Ireland. The border is probably the toughest challenge in Britain’s
withdrawal from the European Union.CreditAndrew Testa for The New York Times
Worryingly
for Mrs. May, many of her enemies, on both the right and the left, are
converging around the view that the compromise she has carefully forged
is the worst of both worlds, leaving Britain without a voice in the
European Union but still subject to many of its trade rules. Several
leading Brexit supporters have characterized the draft deal as worse
than membership in the bloc they find so objectionable.
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The
focus of the discord has been around plans to ensure that, whatever
happens in future trade talks, there should be no physical checks at the
border between Northern Ireland, which is part of the United Kingdom,
and Ireland, which is a member of the European Union.
Under
the so-called backstop plan that is part of the draft deal, the whole
of the United Kingdom would remain in a customs union with the European
Union until future trade plans that negate the need for border checks
are worked out.
But Northern Ireland
would be subject to more of the European Union’s regulatory processes
than the rest of the country, a fact that Mr. Raab said “presents a very
real threat to the integrity of the United Kingdom.”
He
also objected to the fact that Britain could not unilaterally leave the
backstop, a move that would clear a path to exit a customs union and
pursue trade deals with other countries.
One
of Mr. Raab’s under secretaries for Brexit, Suella Braverman, also
stepped down on Thursday. Their departure had been preceded on Thursday
morning by the resignation of Shailesh Vara, a junior Northern Ireland
minister.
Speaking
at a news conference in Brussels shortly before Mr. Raab’s
announcement, Michel Barnier, the top European Union negotiator, and
Donald Tusk, the president of the European Council, said they would call
a summit meeting for Nov. 25, where leaders of the bloc’s member states
could endorse the deal.
Mr.
Tusk said that the accord approved by the British cabinet meets two
crucial objectives: It limits the damage Brexit would cause, and it
protects the vital interests of the 27 remaining members states and the
European Union as a whole.
“We have always said Brexit is a lose-lose situation and these negotiations were always about damage control,” he said.
Mr.
Barnier said that the coming days, when the focus will be on finalizing
a political declaration outlining the future relationship between
Britain and the European Union, would be “intense,” adding that “we have
no time to lose.” Brexit is scheduled to take effect on March 29.
However,
European Union officials have made it clear that they were scheduling
the summit meeting on the assumption that turbulence in Mrs. May’s party
would not paralyze or overwhelm her government.
Follow Stephen Castle on Twitter: @_StephenCastle.
Reporting was contributed by Michael Wolgelenter, Amie Tsang and Richard Pérez-Peña from London, and Steven Erlanger from Brussels.
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Reporting was contributed by Michael Wolgelenter, Amie Tsang and Richard Pérez-Peña from London, and Steven Erlanger from Brussels.
You can order Wolfgang Hampel 'Satire ist mein Lieblingstier' (Satire is my favourite animal)
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United Kingdom
Australia
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France
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Wolfgang Hampel - Satire ist mein Lieblingstier ( Satire is my favourite animal )
Informationen über die Kultveranstaltung "Vita Magica" der Akademie für Ältere in Heidelberg
Wolfgang Hampel - Satire ist mein Lieblingstier ( Satire is my favourite animal )
Many ESC fans from all over the world are so very sad because we lost Joy Fleming - one of the best singers ever.
Betty MacDonald fan club founder Wolfgang Hampel sings 'Try to remember' especially for Betty MacDonald fan club organizer Linde Lund at Vita Magica September
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