UK MPs back Brady amendment, sending Prime Minister Theresa May back to Brussels to renegotiate
British MPs support PM Theresa May's plan to renegotiate Brexit deal
British MPs have back the Brady amendment by 317 to 301 in Tuesday Jan 29,2019 's crucial vote, meaning they expect May to go back to Brussels to renegotiate the Brexit deal currently on the table.
The amendment was introduced by Sir Graham Brady, the influential head of the Conservative Party's 1922 Committee.
He wants to overcome the main hurdle to May's deal by replacing the "Irish backstop", which he claims would give May "enormous firepower" to demand concessions from Brussels and could simply be appended to her withdrawal agreement.
The Brady amendment rests on Conservative hopes that a clear statement of intent by MPs will prompt the EU to compromise, but there is no sign it will.
Parliament back amendment rejecting a no-deal Brexit
British MPs have backed an advisory amendment rejecting a no-deal Brexit by 318 votes to 310.
This so-called Cooper amendment, put forward by the Labour chair of the Home Affairs Select Committee, Yvette Cooper, sought to prevent a "no-deal" Brexit, something economists warn would be disastrous, by directing the government to extend the deadline if there is no agreement by February 26.
MPs reject plan to delay Brexit, increasing chances of no-deal Brexit
Members of UK Parliament have rejected a plan to delay Brexit on Tuesday evening.The delay was a plan to prevent a possibly disastrous no-deal Brexit, which could
If the amendment, which was defeated 321 to 298, had passed, parliamentarians would have secured time to vote on a draft bill which would grant parliament power to request a Brexit extension if Prime Minister Theresa May did not receive support for the deal by 26 February.
The Cooper plan, which was backed by Labour Leader Jeremy
Corbyn, called for an extension of Article 50 to keep the UK in the EU
until the end of the year in order to reach a deal.
It was supported by the Labour frontbench as well as Tories including Nick Boles, but was defeated by 321 votes to 298
The Labour MPs who voted against it were -
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