May Tells Lawmakers “Hold Your Nerve”

Prime Minister Theresa May told MPs on Tuesday (12 February) to hold their nerve over Brexit and give her more time to negotiate a deal acceptable to both the European Union and the British parliament, write Kylie MacLellan and William James.

The United Kingdom is on course to leave the European Union on March 29 without a deal unless May can persuade the bloc to amend the divorce deal she agreed last year and get it approved by British lawmakers.

“The talks are at a crucial stage”, May told parliament. “We now all need to hold our nerve to get the changes this House requires and deliver Brexit on time”.

The leader of the opposition Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn, accused her of running down the clock with sham negotiations to pressure parliament into backing her deal.

After talks in Strasbourg at the European Parliament, UK Brexit minister Stephen Barclay said there was “a lot of goodwill on both sides” to achieve a deal.

However, Guy Verhofstadt, the European Parliament’s Brexit pointman, said he has yet to hear of a proposal to break the deadlock.

“What are these negotiations at a ‘crucial state’ raised in the House of Commons? The way forward is cross-party, not kicking the can towards a disastrous no deal”, he said on Twitter.

May’s hopes of delivering an on-time Brexit were also undermined by an ITV news report which cited Britain’s lead negotiator Olly Robbins as being overheard in a Brussels bar saying: “In the end, they the EU will probably just give us an extension.”

Critics of the backstop say it could leave Britain subject to EU rules for years after leaving the bloc or even indefinitely.

The EU says the backstop is vital to avoiding the return of border controls in Ireland and has refused to reopen the Brexit divorce deal, though May insists she can get legally binding changes to replace the most contentious parts of the backstop.

“By getting the changes we need to the backstop; by protecting and enhancing workers’ rights and environmental protections; and by enhancing the role of parliament in the next phase of negotiations I believe we can reach a deal that this House can support”, May said.

The EU’s Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, said on Monday the bloc would agree to tweak the political declaration on post-Brexit EU-UK ties that forms part of the exit package, to reflect a plan for a closer future relationship that could remove the need for the backstop.

May is pursuing three options in talks with Brussels: negotiating a way for Britain to leave the backstop without needing EU agreement, agreeing a time limit to the backstop, or finding an alternative arrangement that replaces it altogether.