Brexit: Ex-minister outlines plan for MPs to seize control of EU withdrawal as Brussels issues warning over Irish border
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Your support makes all the difference.MPs are drawing the battle lines for a potential extension to the Article 50 process and “indicative votes” on a fresh EU referendum, as they table rival Brexit plans ahead of a Commons clash next week.
It comes after Theresa May was warned that up to 40 government ministers could resign if she refuses to allow them to vote for a plan that would prevent a no-deal scenario on 29 March.
Speaking on Monday, Ms May vowed again to seek changes to the Irish border backstop – leading to Jeremy Corbyn to compare her statement to “Groundhog Day”, adding it was like last week’s crushing defeat on her Brexit deal “never happened”.
For events as they happened, see our live coverage below
Ahead of today's cabinet meeting, Stephen Barclay, the Brexit secretary, has suggested that the EU 27 might not all support an extension to Article 50 should the UK request one (all of them have to agree unanimously to prolong the negotiations).
He told BBC's Radio 4 Today: "It is not in the unilateral gift of the UK to extend. There are practical issues.
"I think that (support for an extension) is an over-simplification because there are many in the European Parliament and elsewhere that are concerned about an extension in terms of the impact."
He added: "There are many in Brussels that are concerned about the prospect of an extension in terms of the interplay with the European parliamentary elections, because you couldn't pass the legislation in the UK for a referendum ... in the time before the end of May."
"But also from the EU point of view, they have been very clear that they don't want an extension with no purpose and so we come back to the issue as to what it is MPs are for and just what they are against."
In the event that Britain is unable to secure a deal with the European Union, the decline of freight trade could last up to six months, estimates in contingency plans drawn up for the government say.
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