May makes plea for unity to get Brexit deal

Bloomberg

Prime Minister Theresa May launched a desperate appeal to her Conservative Party lawmakers to unite behind her in driving through a Brexit agreement that might be palatable to EU leaders.
In a letter to her MPs, May said she’s planning to return to Brussels for further talks with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker next week and plans to speak to the leader of every EU member state in the days ahead. Gaining headway in Brussels will depend largely on whether she can show a united front at home.
May urged her party to “move beyond what divides us” and sacrifice “personal preferences” to unite in the “higher service of the national interest.”
The Times newspaper suggested May’s rhetoric won’t work. It reported that Steve Baker, deputy chairman of the euroskeptic European Research Group, told his colleagues that Brussels and London were pretending to negotiate while running down the clock so May’s Brexit deal can be forced through parliament. Lawmakers rejected her deal by a huge margin on January 15, and another vote last week failed after a hard-line group of Brexit-backing MPs shot down any hopes May had of getting it approved. Getting that bloc, while in the minority of the parliamentary party, to break bread with moderates has proved elusive to the point of hopeless since May triggered the Article 50 exit clause almost two years ago.
One senior member of May’s administration has said she probably has two weeks to save her deal before the House of Commons takes the process out of her hands, in a vote scheduled for February 27.
May urged all sides to make compromises, or risk a situation in which Brexit doesn’t happen — a state of affairs that the prime minister says would undermine British democracy.
Showing some semblance of unity in Westminster is key to May’s hopes of convincing the European Union’s 27 leaders that she can get a version of her deal through the House of Commons. The current stalemate threatens to force Britain out of the EU with no deal on March 29.
The only group since the Brexit vote to have shown much unity so far is the EU. It hasn’t budged from its mantra that there is “no Plan B,” and has stuck to the backstop—the arrangement designed to ensure there’s no physical border on the island of Ireland.

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