Theresa May must go whether or not she gets her Brexit deal, Tory MPs blast as PM’s authority crumbles
The Prime Minister is under fresh pressure to announce her resignation or see her legacy go up in flames
The Prime Minister is under fresh pressure to announce her resignation or see her legacy go up in flames
THERESA May today faces fresh pressure to quit - whether or not she manages to force through her Brexit deal.
The PM is being urged to vow she'll resign in a last-ditch bid to convince Brexiteers they should back her deal in the Commons this week.
And she was warned that if her Brexit strategy collapses, she'll have no choice but to step down anyway as one of her own MPs branded her "shameful".
The PM wants to hold a third "meaningful vote" on her deal this week in a high-stakes gamble - if she can win over the DUP.
As Westminster braced for a crucial week in British politics:
This morning the Prime Minister summoned Cabinet ministers for a Downing Street summit to lay out the next steps on Brexit - but they didn't discuss her own future.
During the meeting, ministers clashed over whether they should go for a No Deal Brexit in the event the PM's deal is defeated for good.
It came as Mrs May faces threats from all sides with multiple ex-allies calling for her to resign after The Sun said she must quit to save her deal.
Tory MP Nigel Evans said it was "important for her legacy" to name a date for her departure.
He told the BBC: "Clearly a number of people do not want the Prime Minister anywhere near the next phase of negotiations, which is the future trading relationship between ourselves and the EU."
Ex-Cabinet minister John Whittingdale added: "I would be more inclined to support the Government if I knew there was a new leader taking us into the future negotiations."
Brexiteer Marcus Fysh said the Cabinet were "lions led by donkeys".
And in a furious Commons encounter, Crispin Blunt blasted: "She has just put the final torpedo into her own deal and any real prospect of Brexit.
"Her statement will represent the most shameful surrender by a British leader since Singapore in 1942."
Yesterday the PM met a number of leading rebels including Boris Johnson and Jacob Rees-Mogg at her country home, Chequers.
No.10 was forced to deny reports that she told them she'll stand down if they agree to back her deal.
In his newspaper column today, Mr Johnson hinted he'll consider voting for the deal as long as Tories have the chance to elect a new leader afterwards.
He wrote: “If she really wants her deal to go through parliament, the PM could still set out convincing proofs of how the next phase of the negotiations - when all the key questions are to be settled - will be different from the first.
"How will we be able to take back control of our laws? Will we really do free trade deals? And can we really go on with a negotiating team that has so resoundingly failed?"
Trade Secretary Liam Fox insisted that if Brexiteers refused to support Mrs May's deal the result would be a soft Brexit or staying in the EU permanently.
He said: "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."
In a further sign Mrs May is losing her grip, one junior minister suggested he backs the five million Brits who have called for Article 50 to be revoked, cancelling Brexit altogether.
Mark Field said: "My personal view is that I would be happy to revoke Article 50 - I appreciate that is probably a minority view."
This week is likely to bring a series of crunch votes in the Commons.
Tonight MPs will debate an amendment which would give backbenchers control of the Parliament timetable.
Then on Wednesday they're likely to stage "indicative votes" with MPs choosing their preferred Brexit option from a range of seven.
Theresa May has shown courage — but to seal her deal and deliver Brexit, she needs to resign
THERESA May must announce today that she will stand down as soon as her Brexit deal is approved and Britain is out of the EU.
The Sun says this with regret, having supported her since before she became Prime Minister. But she has lost the backing of much of the country and now her party.
Her deal has only one, slim chance of achieving a majority in the Commons.
That is if she pledges immediately to resign and set in motion the election of her successor as Tory leader and PM after we leave the EU on the new deadline of May 22.
If she does so, Tory Brexiteers and the DUP must back the deal. Because if it fails again this week we are heading for a much softer Brexit — or none.
That will be a catastrophe for the country, the Tories and Parliament.
Mrs May deserves huge credit. She is a dedicated public servant with an unshakeable sense of duty, who in 2016 took on the greatest challenge of any PM since World War Two.
She has stuck to it through thick and thin, showing remarkable resilience in the face of repeated humiliations, rebellions and a relentless barrage of vitriol from almost all-comers.
Unlike so many she has determinedly respected the will of the Leave majority. The very concept of democracy has been degraded in many other countries, yet she has resolutely defended ours.
She must now take the next principled step — and show she is not just another craven politician determined to cling to power.
Mrs May has insisted all along that not only must the referendum result be honoured, as promised by both main parties, but that it must mean leaving the EU’s central institutions — the Single Market and Customs Union — as well as the remit of its courts.
She has maintained that the power to trade independently outside the Brussels club must be secured. It is the economic prize of Brexit.
This was exactly the right course. Those arguing to soften those red lines are almost entirely those who regret Brexit and wish to neutralise it.
Sadly, many mistakes were made. A Remainer, Mrs May appointed a weak Cabinet of Remainer friends, most of whom considered Brexit a disaster to be managed rather than a historic opportunity to exploit.
The Brexiteers she did appoint — David Davis, Boris Johnson, Michael Gove and later Dominic Raab — were sidelined and ignored.
The Government triggered Article 50 far too early without a plan for our departure. In hindsight it should have made rapid plans for No Deal from the outset, giving us a position of strength from which to negotiate.
Mrs May said “No Deal is better than a bad deal”, only to have Treasury bureaucrats refuse to prepare for it.
After her disastrous 2017 election her sole focus became achieving Brexit while holding her party’s warring factions together and fending off Remainer rebellions in Parliament.
While our economy, employment and wages have grown strongly there has been policy paralysis, with mediocre ministers left blundering along. We need not list here all Britain’s problems. They are many, and obvious.
Her Brexit deal is not the worst imaginable. Those are the so-called Norway Plus option — which is not Brexit in any way — or the permanent Customs Union, brainlessly championed by Corbyn, which destroys the economic case for leaving.
No one should pretend it is a great deal either. But it ensures that Brexit finally happens, ending the fractious Leave/Remain debate and refocusing Britain on the far more crucial negotiations for a future trade agreement.
The DUP and the Tory ERG will have to hold their noses and vote for it. And to win that unlikely support, Mrs May must set in place a truly dignified exit, culminating in a new leader.
Theresa May will then go down in history as a great public servant, as the leader who delivered Brexit and proved to the British people that our democracy is robust and far, far more important than any individual.
PM, it’s time to move on.
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