Thursday, 26 Dec 2024

Theresa May faces ‘up to 20’ ministerial resignations from Remainers

Theresa May faces ‘up to 20’ ministerial resignations from cabinet Remainers if the PM tries to stop rebel MPs pushing a soft Brexit in indicative votes tomorrow

  • Anne Milton has told the Prime Minister that ministers will quit en masse if they are not given a free vote 
  • Mrs May will address Tory party’s 1922 committee tomorrow night and could reveal her own exit date
  • Government was defeated by 329 votes to 302 in Commons – majority of 27 as Tories stage major rebellion 
  • Amendment by Sir Oliver Letwin allows MPs to take control of business on Wednesday from the Government 
  • Remainer rebel Nick Boles said afterwards: ‘I’m going to wake up tomorrow morning with a broad grin on my face. I’m going to think — I finally live in a parliamentary democracy, where parliament is sovereign’
  • Alistair Burt, Richard Harrington and Steve Brine all quit ministerial posts to rebel against the Government
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Theresa May has been warned that up to 20 of her remainer ministers are willing to quit if they are not allowed a free vote on alternatives to her Brexit deal tomorrow night, it was revealed today. 

Commons Speaker John Bercow will decide which motions will be voted on this Wednesday including on No Deal, a second referendum, Mrs May’s deal and revoking Article 50 to stop Brexit completely. 

Tory rebels are already cock-a-hoop after MPs wrestled control of Brexit from Mrs May last night and will vote on alternatives to her Brexit deal in 24 hours time. 

And in more bad news for the Prime Minister Skills Minister Anne Milton reportedly told her today that up to 20 ministers are ready to resign if she stops a free vote.

It is not known if the so-called ‘gang of four’ remainer rebel ministers in her cabinet, David Gauke, Amber Rudd, Greg Clark and David Mundell, are considering resigning but more than a dozen from the junior ranks are willing to quit if they can’t have a free vote, it has emerged.

Tomorrow’s votes have caused another major rift in the cabinet because Brexiteers Jeremy Hunt, Liz Truss, Chris Grayling and Liam Fox have told the Prime Minister the vote should be whipped – meaning rebels would have to be sacked or resign if they defy her.

Minister for Children Nadhim Zahawi is the only senior MP to speak out today and said he believes that Mrs May is likely to offer a free vote, which would avert mass resignations but further weaken her grip on Brexit.

He said: ‘I suspect it must be [a free vote] because if the will of Parliament is to have free votes’. 




Commons Speaker John Bercow will decide which motions will be voted on tomorrow including on No Deal, a second referendum, Mrs May’s deal and revoking Article 50 to stop Brexit completely as Theresa May loses control of Brexit and faces mass resignations if she tries to whip tomorrow’s votes

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Under the plan put forward by Sir Oliver Letwin and Labour’s Hilary Benn, MPs will be able to table motions in support of their favoured Brexit option for debate tomorrow.

Commons Speaker John Bercow will then decide which motions will be voted on.

At 7pm on Wednesday, MPs will vote on the various options, with the Commons sitting suspended for half an hour for the process to take place.

Mr Bercow will then announce the results later in the evening.

Further votes could take place on Monday, April 1 under the plan.

Mrs May warned the Commons yesterday they would be betraying those who voted to leave the EU before they voted to hold a series of votes that could determine how – if at all – the UK leaves the European Union .

Last night Tory Nick Boles called the result ‘very exciting’ and said: ‘Do you know what? I’m going to wake up tomorrow morning with a broad grin on my face. I’m going to think — I finally live in a parliamentary democracy, where parliament is sovereign.’

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    Earlier in a statement to MPs, the Prime Minister warned she would not feel bound by the results of any indicative votes – which could include a softer, Norway-style deal, a second referendum or revoking the Article 50 withdrawal process altogether.   

    The seven options for Brexit

    The seven Brexit options MPs may get to choose from:

    :: Theresa May’s Brexit deal – The Withdrawal Agreement negotiated with Brussels that has already been rejected by MPs twice.

    :: Revoke Article 50 – The cancellation of the UK’s notice to Brussels that it would leave the EU, which was given almost two years ago.

    :: Second referendum – Another national poll of voters to check whether they still want to leave the EU.

    :: The PM’s deal plus customs union – Labour’s Brexit plan, which would prevent Britain being able to strike its own trade deals.

    :: The PM’s deal plus customs union plus single market – An even ‘softer’ Brexit plan, also known as ‘Common Market 2.0’ or ‘Norway Plus’, that would include keeping freedom of movement of people.

    :: Free Trade Agreement – A trade deal between Great Britain and the EU, but excluding Northern Ireland, which would create a customs border in the Irish Sea.

    :: No Deal – The country would leave the EU without striking an agreement with Brussels. 

    But Mr Boles warned that MPs would force Mrs May’s hand with new legislation if she refused to do their bidding.   

    He told the BBC’s Newsnight show: ‘If the government refuses to listen to what Parliament has voted for we will bring forward a bill that will require it to reflect Parliament’s wishes.’

    Pro-Europe Tory MP Mr Boles, who backed the indicative votes amendment, added: ‘It is a much better victory than any of us had dared hope.’   

    The Commons voted by 329 votes to 302 – a majority of 27 – to approve an amendment brought by Tory ex-minister Sir Oliver Letwin allowing it to take control of business tomorrow from the Government. 

    This will allow MPs to select their favorite Brexit option in so-called ‘indicative votes’, which are likely to include soft Brexit options and the possibility of remaining in the European Union. 

    Three ministers were among 29 Tory rebels who defied the Prime Minister and backed the amendment. 

    Minutes before the vote Watford’s Richard Harrington quit as an energy minister in order to support the Letwin plan, accusing the Government of ‘playing roulette’ with people’s lives. He was followed by Foreign Office minister Alistair Burt and health minister Steve Brine. 

    Other high profile Tories to rebel included former ministers Ken Clarke, Nicky Morgan, Justine Greening, Andrew Mitchell, Sam Gyimah, Damian Green, Alberto Costa and Dominic Grieve, plus Damian Collins, chairman of the Culture Committee.

    Fellow Tory rebel Guto Bebb said: ‘The scale of the Government’s defeat and the principled resignations of ministers Richard Harrington, Alistair Burt and Steve Brine are more nails in the coffin of a Brexit deal that very few in the country or Parliament have ever wanted.

    ‘The Prime Minister has now lost control of this process. What is needed now in this national emergency is not more posturing or playing roulette with people’s lives but to give Parliament the time and space needed to work out what Brexit means, as well as begin preparing for important democratic elections to the European Parliament.’

    The Tories who rebelled against Theresa May 

    Twenty nine Tories including three ministers rebelled against the whip to hand Theresa May a devastating defeat. They were: 

    They were: 

    • Guto Bebb
    • Richard Benyon 
    • Nick Boles 
    • Steve Brine (minister)
    • Alistair Burt (minister)
    • Kenneth Clarke
    • Damian Collins 
    • Alberto Costa
    • Jonathan Djanogly 
    • George Freeman 
    • Damian Green 
    • Justine Greening 
    • Dominic Grieve 
    • Sam Gyimah
    • Richard Harrington (minister)
    • Joseph Johnson 
    • Phillip Lee 
    • Jeremy Lefroy 
    • Oliver Letwin
    • Paul Masterton
    • Andrew Mitchell
    • Nicky Morgan 
    • Robert Neill 
    • Sarah Newton 
    • Mark Pawsey 
    • Antoinette Sandbach
    • Nicholas Soames
    • Caroline Spelman
    • John Stevenson
    • Edward Vaizey (voted twice to abstain) 




    Remainer Nick Boles has hailed a ‘momentous’ victory over his Prime Minister and said he would ‘wake up smiling’ today

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      Theresa May indicated in the Commons earlier today that she would allocate Government time for indicative votes if the Letwin Amendment was defeated


      The defeated Prime Minister photographed leaving the Palace of Westminster last night after enduring yet another torrid day over Brexit


      The historic moment the Government lost the Letwin amendment by 329 votes to 302, a whopping majority of 27 for the rebels. The last time a similar vote was held a fortnight ago it lost by two votes


      Sir Oliver’s move to give MPs control over the path to Brexit attracted cross-party support and won by a convincing margin in the Commons to heap fresh pressure on Theresa May

      The Government later lost the main motion by 327 votes to 300, the same margin. 

      It came after MPs had narrowly rejected a backbench amendment brought by Dame Margaret Beckett to allow the Commons to have a vote if the UK is seven days away from leaving the EU without a deal, by 314 votes to 311, a majority of three. 

      Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn also welcomed the result, hailing the fact the House had now ‘taken control’.


      Energy minister Richard Harrington quit to vote for the rebel amendment, sending a letter to the Prime Minister accusing her Government of ‘playing roulette’ with people’s lives

      He said: ‘This Government has been an abject failure and this House must now find a solution…

      ‘This House must also consider whether any deal should be put to the people for a confirmatory vote.

      ‘Where this Government has failed, this House must, and I believe will, succeed.’  

      Tory former minister Ed Vaizey voted both for and against Sir Oliver’s amendment, which is regarded as a formal abstention. 

      Brexiteer Tory backbencher Andrew Bridgen said it was time for Theresa May to quit.

      The North West Leicestershire MP told Sky News: ‘I think we were expecting the Government to be defeated on the Letwin amendment. 

      ‘But I think the size of the defeat and the fact that three Government ministers resigned will have been a great disappointment to the Government this evening.

      ‘I think we are going to end up with a general election before the end of this year, probably in the summer.

      ‘What I want to see now is the Prime Minister to stand down, let us have a new leader of the Conservative Party, and then I think we need to go to the country and get a majority so we can actually deliver Brexit.’  

      Eight Brexiteer Labour MPs rebelled to vote against Sir Oliver’s amendment, according to the division list.

      They were: Kevin Barron, Ronnie Campbell, Rosie Cooper, Caroline Flint , Stephen Hepburn, Kate Hoey, John Mann and Graham Stringer.

      The Prime Minister had earlier told the Commons she would set aside Government time for votes if the amendment was defeated, in a bid to head off the rebellion.

      She addressed the Commons this afternoon and admitted ‘as things stand there is not sufficient support’ to hold a fresh vote on her deal, quashing speculation that it would happen tomorrow. 

      She faces a move by rebel MPs who want to pass a motion in just a few minutes time to seize control of Brexit – giving them the power to hold a vote on Wednesday letting the Commons select its favorite Brexit option in so-called ‘indicative votes’.

      The PM vowed to whip against the motion proposed by Remainer rebel MP Oliver Letwin and also said she could ignore MPs’ preferences if they try to force her to adopt a softer Brexit.

      But she offered to hold indicative votes on government time in an effort to head-off the rebellion – meaning the votes would do ahead but rebel MPs would not be in control of the process. 

      After ruling out a third vote on her deal tomorrow, Theresa May told MPs this afternoon she could not guarantee that she would commit to implementing anything they voted for in an indicative process because they could involve an ‘outcome that is un-negotiable with the EU’.

      She added: ‘No government could give a blank cheque to commit to an outcome without knowing what it is. So I cannot commit the Government to delivering the outcome of any votes held by this House, but I do commit to engaging constructively with this process’.

      The Prime Minister said the ‘default outcome’ remained leaving without a deal and said: ‘The alternative is to pursue a different form of Brexit or a second referendum.  

      ‘But the bottom line remains: if the House does not approve the Withdrawal Agreement this week and is not prepared to countenance leaving without a deal, we would have to seek a longer extension.’

      That would mean holding European elections and would mean ‘we will not have been able to guarantee Brexit’. 

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        These are the seven options for Brexit MPs could vote on this week if Mrs May is forced towards a softer Brexit

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          WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO BREXIT THIS WEEK?  

          LIKELY TO HAPPEN WEDNESDAY: MPs HOLD INDICATIVE VOTES  

          The Commons is set to hold a series of indicative votes on Brexit alternatives this week, most likely on Wednesday. The alternatives include a softer Brexit, a second referendum or leaving with No Deal. If one commands a majority, MPs will try to pressure Theresa May into adopting that option. But there is no binding way of making her do so.

          LIKELY TO HAPPEN BY THURSDAY: MAY HOLDS A THIRD MEANINGFUL VOTE ON HER BREXIT DEAL

          May is likely to try and pass her Brexit deal a third time, after the EU offered a Brexit date of 22 May if she does so this week. The Prime Minister will use threats that MPs will take control and force a softer Brexit in an attempt to force Brexiteer rebels to finally back her. She may also offer them a date when she will quit in return for their support. Thursday is the most likely day for her vote, but there is a chance she won’t hold it if she does not believe she’ll win.

          FRIDAY: MPs TAKE CONTROL?

          If the PM loses a third vote on her deal, MPs and Remainer Cabinet ministers will try and force her towards a softer Brexit. Brexiteer MPs and Cabinet minister will conversely try and push her towards a No Deal exit from the EU. The most likely outcomes are:  

          NO DEAL

          Theresa May is under no obligation to accept MPs favoured option for Brexit, and could take Britain out the EU without a deal on 12 April. She could remain as Prime Minister under this option.  

          SOFTER BREXIT

          MPs could try and force May to negotiate a softer Brexit, but this will provoke outrage from Brexiteers. It does not necessarily mean a delay beyond a few months because Britain could still leave the EU under the withdrawal arrangement.   

           SECOND REFERENDUM

          IF MPs vote for a second referendum either on May’s deal or a range of options, it is likely to mean a lengthy delay to Brexit. May has indicated she will step down if Brexit is delayed beyond June 30.

           Setting out the choices facing MPs, Theresa May said: ‘Unless this House agrees to it, no-deal will not happen.

          ‘No Brexit must not happen. And a slow Brexit, which extends Article 50 beyond May 22, forces the British people to take part in European elections and gives up control of any of our borders, laws, money or trade is not a Brexit that will bring the British people together.’

          She said her deal was a compromise which respected both sides of the argument and ‘if this House can back it we can be out of the European Union in less than two months’.

          Confirming that the Government would oppose the Letwin amendment, Mrs May she said it would set an ‘unwelcome precedent which would overturn the balance of our democratic institutions’.

          However she said the Government would provide time to allow MPs to debate and vote on the alternatives to her deal.

          No one wants another election! Only 12 PER CENT of the public say they want to go to the polls – but ministers say they WILL call one if MPs try to force a soft Brexit 


          Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay leaving Downing Street with Theresa May today after cabinet, at which he is said to have again floated the idea of holding a General Election

          The Government is prepared to pull the plug and force a General Election if MPs try to seize control of Brexit and make it softer than Theresa May’s deal.

          Ministers including Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay are said to have raised the prospect if Parliament voted to wrestle control of the withdrawal process. 

          The talk of forcing a General Election come despite an Opinium poll from two months ago finding that only 12 per cent of Britons would welcome another one, just two years after the last resulted in a hung Parliament.

          Mr Barclay reportedly repeated at Cabinet today warnings he gave on television yesterday.

          Speaking on the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show he said that if the Commons took control of the order paper and votes for a different outcome, it would ‘potentially collide with fundamental commitments the Government has given in their manifesto’, though he said the vote itself would ‘not be binding’.

          Explaining the scenario, he said: ‘What Parliament has done is vote for a number of contradictory things so we would need to untangle that but ultimately, at its logical conclusion, the risk of a general election increases because you potentially have a situation where Parliament is instructing the executive to do something that is counter to what it was elected to do.’

          International Trade Secretary Liam Fox this morning gave a stark warning to MPs, telling BBC Radio 4’s Today: ‘I was elected, as 80 per cent of members were, to respect the referendum and leave the European Union. 

          ‘I was also elected on a manifesto that specifically said no single market and no customs union. 

           ‘That, for Conservative MPs who are honouring the manifesto, limits their room for manoeuvre. 

          The former hardline Brexiteer turned May loyalist added that the prospect of a longer Brexit delay meaning participation in May’s European Elections would ‘unleash a torrent of pent-up frustration from voters’.    

          ‘I’m not sure that there are many people in the House of Commons who would fancy that particular meeting with voters,’ he said.

          ‘It would unleash a torrent of pent-up frustration from voters and I think that the major parties will do what they can to avoid having to fight those European elections.

          ‘There is nothing in politics like a little bit of self-interest to concentrate the minds, and I think, as we get towards that date, increasingly my colleagues will have to decide which of the limited options they want to follow.’

          He urged MPs to back Mrs May’s deal, warning: ‘For a lot of my colleagues, I think they still believe there is a route to no deal. I have come to the conclusion some time ago that was unlikely given the House of Commons that we have.

          ‘I think we will see today that there is a mood in the House of Commons to stop us leaving without a deal, even if that means no Brexit. I think that is a constitutionally disastrous position.’

          ‘It will be for this House to put forward options for consideration and to determine the procedure by which they do so,’ she said.

          ‘However I must confess that I am sceptical about such a process of indicative votes.’ 

          To jeers from the opposition, she added: ‘I think it’s important that nobody would want to support an option which contradicted the manifesto on which they stood for election to this House.

          ‘MPs elected to this House at this time have a duty to respect the result of the referendum that took place in 2016 and attempts to stop that result being put into place or attempts to change the result of that referendum are not respecting the voters and not respecting our democracy.’

          Mrs May’s spokesman later denied No Deal was off the table. 

          He said: ‘The point the PM was making is that the House has voted against No Deal and will take every opportunity to seek to stop it.’

          He said Mrs May continued to want her deal to pass and that No Deal was still the default option in law. 

          Mrs May caused fury among the DUP for claiming No Deal preparations had been made in Northern Ireland because it has no devolved executive.

          A No 10 spokesman insisted it was ‘not a tactic’ but a ‘statement of facts’. 

          The Prime Minister is keen to offer a final vote to stop MPs taking charge of the UK’s departure from the EU with Parliament ready to push Britain towards a softer Brexit or a second referendum. 

          But a phone call between Mrs May and DUP leader Arlene Foster at lunchtime failed to provide the breakthrough the Prime Minister needs as she seeks to win support for her deal. 

          The 10 DUP MPs have opposed the Withdrawal Agreement in the two previous votes on it and a party spokesman said the party’s ‘position remains unchanged’. 

          And in a sign of strained relationship the DUP’s Westminster leader Nigel Dodds appeared to be shaking with rage as he accused Theresa May of a ‘fundamental lack of preparation’ for No Deal.

          He said the Government had known for ‘considerable time’ the UK was due to leave the EU on March 29 – but still wanted an extension for a fortnight.

          He said: ‘What will change in 2 weeks?’ before savaging her for agreeing to the Irish backstop ‘when it is the thing that bedevils her agreement’ and Ireland and the EU say the Northern Irish border will remain open in the event of a No Deal.

          DUP MP Sammy Wilson then told Mrs May: ‘When are you going to stop using Northern Ireland as an excuse? We will not be used in any scare tactics to boost this through.’ 

          This afternoon Mrs May met Jeremy Corbyn for a ‘frank and comprehensive exchange of views’ on Brexit – but the Labour leader rejected the idea that she would be willing to split her Brexit deal into two parts in bid to win their support. 

          Responding to Theresa May’s latest update to the Commons, Mr Corbyn told the Commons: ‘The Government’s approach to Brexit has now become a national embarrassment.

          ‘After two years of failure, broken promise after broken promise, the Prime Minister finally accepted the inevitable last week and voted to extend Article 50 and went to Brussels to negotiate.

          ‘Last week’s summit represented another negotiating failure for the Prime Minister – her proposals were rejected and new terms were imposed on her.’

          Mr Corbyn criticised last week’s ‘wholly inappropriate’ Downing Street speech by the Prime Minister, arguing she should not have tried to ‘pit the people against MPs’.

          He added: ‘In a climate of heightened emotions where MPs on all sides have received threats and intimidation, I hope the Prime Minister will further reflect and think again about making what I believe to be such dangerous and irresponsible statements.

          ‘Every step of the way along this process the Government has refused to reach out, refused to listen and refused to find a consensus that can represent the views of the whole country, not just the Conservative Party.’

          Brexiteer MPs including Boris Johnson and Jacob Rees-Mogg could still back Mrs May’s deal but have indicated she would have to promise to quit afterwards to secure their backing.  

          Today the Prime Minister faced her fractured Cabinet days after they tried to oust her in a failed coup that was sunk within 24 hours this weekend. 

          She told ministers she wanted to hold another vote on her deal – but despite rumours about her future no ministers mentioned the prospect of her resignation.

          Describing the two-hour meeting her official spokesman said: ‘There was a determination at Cabinet to do whatever it takes to get a deal so the UK can leave as soon as possible. There is a sense from the PM and Cabinet to get on with this.’  

          Speaker Bercow sparks fury after ‘insulting’ Tory MP


          John Bercow again started anger among MPs over his style of management in the House of Commons. He clashed with Greg Hands, saying: ‘He was once a whip, he wasn’t a very good whip’

          Divisive Speaker John Bercow sparked uproar in the Commons after clashing with a former Tory whip.

          MPs demanded an apology after accusing Mr Bercow of ‘insulting’ Greg Hands after appearing to insult him over his skills in the disciplinary roll.

          Tory Mr Hands, who was deputy chief whip under David Cameron between 2013 and 2015, had attempted to interrupt Mr Bercow, prompting the Speaker to react badly.

          Mr Bercow said: ‘I don’t require any help from the right honourable gentleman for Chelsea and Fulham. I wouldn’t have the foggiest idea where to start. He was once a whip, he wasn’t a very good whip.’

          There was uproar in the chamber as MPs clamoured for an apology, with former Tory chairman Sir Patrick McLoughlin making a point of order accusing the Speaker of a lack of respect.

          Mr Bercow tried to make peace, saying: ‘What I would say is if I have caused offence I very happily apologise.’

          Source: Read Full Article

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