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BRITAIN is no longer expected to leave the EU by March 29 after Parliament overwhelmingly voted to extend Article 50.

Here's what we know about that piece of legislation that's got us all hot under the collar.

 Britain is no longer expected to leave the EU by March 29
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Britain is no longer expected to leave the EU by March 29Credit: PA:Press Association

What is Article 50?

Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty is a very basic five-point plan that allows any country to leave the EU.

At just 250 words it is light on detail for the momentous move that the UK is still trying to make, nearly three years after the referendum.

It states: “Any member state may decide to withdraw from the union in accordance with its own constitutional requirements.”

The UK was the very first country to trigger Article 50, and did so on Wednesday, March 29, 2017.

This set ticking the two-year period in which the UK is legally required to leave the EU - and sparked a furious race to get a Brexit deal through within this time frame.

What will happen if Britain extends Article 50?

With no deal agreement in sight, MPs endorsed Theresa May's plan to ask Brussels for an extension to the Article 50 process on March 14, 2019.

The move means Britain WON'T quit the EU on March 29 - as the PM has promised for the past two years.

Mrs May will now bring her Brexit deal back to the Commons for a third meaningful vote.

She says that if it passes, she will then ask the EU for a "short technical extension" until the end of June, to give Parliament the time to force through the necessary legislation.

But if the deal is defeated again, the PM has warned that Britain will have to stay in the EU beyond the summer and take part in European Parliament elections.

Extending Article 50 would give Parliament more time to finalise a deal, though at this stage it's not clear how much time will help.

It's also uncertain if Britain will have to hold elections to the European Parliament if the UK is still a member state in May.

 MPs have voted to move Article 50 back by three months to June 30, 2019 - but it won't please hard Leavers
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MPs have voted to move Article 50 back by three months to June 30, 2019 - but it won't please hard LeaversCredit: AP:Associated Press

Why do some want to revoke Article 50?

On March 21, 2019, it was reported that over one million people had signed a petition to revoke Article 50 in a bid to cancel Brexit.

The Remainer stunt actually crashed the UK government’s petitions website several times, according to The Guardian.

It was supported by celebs such as actor Hugh Grant, comedian Jennifer Saunders and Professor Brian Cox.

May has faced criticism from both the Remain and Leave camps for triggering Article 50 too early.

Those against the move have argued that rather than initiating the withdrawal, May should wait until there was a cabinet agreement on the UK's stance and they had their ducks in order.

But there was also considerable pressure for May to trigger the withdrawal immediately by those who were impatient to leave the EU.

In fact most MPs seemed to want it at the time, with 498 of our lawmakers voting for the Article 50 bill in February 2017.

Now the encroaching deadline has seen panicked MPs take part in a number of votes to find a solution to the Brexit stalemate.

They won't agree on Theresa May's "meaningful vote" - or at least have rejected the first two she'd agreed with Europe.

The agreement to extend Article 50 is a controversial move for those who voted to Leave the EU, as well as Remainers who are not much enjoying the spectacle.

It could cost us too - Brussels is expected to slap an extra £6.5billion on top of the agreed £39billion pay-off if we stay for an extra four months.

Furious Brexiteers warned that suspending Article 50 beyond March 29 departure date would rob public services of much needed cash.

Tory MP Esther McVey said: “Not only is extending Article 50 a betrayal of the British public, it is a hugely expensive betrayal.

“That money would be far better spent on our police, our prisons locking up those who commit knife crimes and our hard-pressed schools.”

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When was Parliament's vote on revoking Article 50?

Parliament voted on whether to revoke Article 50 on Wednesday, March 27, 2019.

The vote resulted in 184 for the motion and 293 against.

The vote came about after MPs took control of Parliament and then disagreed on all EIGHT options.


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