Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May said MPs had a duty to deliver on the results of the 2016 referendum on leaving the EU (AFP Photo/HO) |
London (AFP) - Britain's parliament on Tuesday resoundingly rejected Prime Minister Theresa May's Brexit deal, triggering a no-confidence vote in her government and plunging its plans to leave the EU into further chaos.
MPs voted
432 to 202 against May's plan for taking Britain out of the European Union, the
biggest parliamentary defeat for a government in modern British political
history.
With a deal
that took nearly two years to craft in tatters and her government's future
hanging in the balance, EU leaders sounded a note of exasperation, urging
Britain to come out and say what it actually wants.
"If a
deal is impossible, and no one wants no deal, then who will finally have the
courage to say what the only positive solution is?" EU president Donald
Tusk tweeted.
Jean-Claude
Juncker, the European Commission president, warned of a heightened risk of a
"no deal" Brexit -- an outcome that could disrupt trade, slow down
the UK economy, and wreak havoc on the financial markets.
The
government of Ireland -- the only EU member state with a land border with
Britain -- said it would now intensify preparations to cope with a
"disorderly Brexit".
And German
Finance Minister Olaf Scholz, representing the EU's most dominant economy and
leading political voice, called the vote "a bitter day for Europe".
Anti-Brexit
activists demonstrate outside parliament (AFP Photo/Ben STANSALL)
|
'Catastrophic' defeat
Most
lawmakers have always opposed Brexit, as have some leading members of the
government, creating a contradiction that has been tearing apart Britain ever
since a June 2016 referendum began its divorce from the other 27 EU states.
Moments
after Tuesday's outcome, which was met with huge cheers by hundreds of
anti-Brexit campaigners who watched the vote on big screens, opposition Labour
leader Jeremy Corbyn submitted a motion of no-confidence in May's government,
calling her defeat "catastrophic".
The vote is
expected on Wednesday at 1900 GMT.
May sought
to strike a conciliatory tone, telling MPs they had the right to challenge her
leadership and promising to hold more talks to salvage a workable solution by
the rapidly approaching March 29 Brexit deadline.
She
promised to hold discussions with MPs from across parliament to identify ideas
"that are genuinely negotiable and have sufficient support in this
House".
"If
these meetings yield such ideas, the government will then explore them with the
European Union."
Downing
Street said May will then return to parliament with a new Brexit proposal on
Monday.
The vote
was met with huge cheers by hundreds of anti-Brexit campaigners
(AFP Photo/Ben
STANSALL)
|
'Political poker'
With their
nation again in turmoil, noisy supporters and opponents of Brexit, rallied
outside the ancient parliament building in London.
"It
could end up being the day that will lead to us leaving with no deal!"
said 25-year-old Simon Fisher, who backs a swift and sharp break with the EU.
A much
larger rally nearby in support of a second referendum turned Parliament Square,
dotted with statues of past UK leaders, into a sea of EU flags.
Economists
said the scale of May's defeat -- on the upper end of most predictions -- now
also put pressure on Brussels to make more meaningful compromises.
The pound
surged higher against the dollar and euro after the vote, seemingly buoyed by
May's promise to seek a compromise with her opponents.
"Markets
project beliefs and the underlying belief is that nobody's going to be
committing economic suicide," BK Asset Management's Boris Schlossberg said.
But
businesses voiced alarm about the outcome, which does nothing to resolve
uncertainty that has been dampening the UK investment climate for months.
"Financial
stability must not be jeopardised in a game of high-stakes political
poker," warned Catherine McGuinness, policy chair at the City of London
Corporation, the body governing the British capital's massive financial
district.
Debates
about Britain's place in the world have raged since a 2016 referendum
pushed
the UK away from its closest trading partner (AFP Photo/Daniel LEAL-OLIVAS)
|
'Warm
words not enough'
May made it
her mission to carry out the wishes of voters after she became prime minister a
month after the referendum, putting aside her own initial misgivings and
stating repeatedly that "Brexit means Brexit".
But her
deal raised concern that Britain could end up locked in an unfavourable trading
relationship with the EU.
Criticism
of the deal was focused on an arrangement to keep open the border with Ireland
by aligning Britain with some EU trade rules, if and until London and Brussels
sign a new economic partnership -- a tortuous process that could take several
years.
Arlene
Foster, head of Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party upon which May
relies for her parliamentary majority, said May needed to win binding
concessions from Brussels to secure her vote.
"Reassurances
whether in the form of letters or warm words, will not be enough," said
Foster.
"The
prime minister must now go back to the European Union and seek fundamental
change to the Withdrawal Agreement."
Speculation
is growing on both sides of the Channel that May could ask to delay Britain's
divorce from the EU after almost half a century of membership.
But a
diplomatic source told AFP any extension would not be possible beyond June 30,
when the new European Parliament will be formed.
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