Britain May Never Leave EU If Brexit Deal Rejected, Says Theresa May
Britain May Never
Leave EU If Brexit Deal Rejected, Says Theresa May
Britain's
Prime Minister Theresa May on Friday called on the European Union for "one more push" to strike a Brexit
compromise deal.
Prime Minister Theresa
May today called on the European Union
for "one more push" to strike a Brexit
compromise deal and told MPs
that rejecting the agreement could mean Britain never leaves.
"It needs just
one more push," May told an audience of workers in Grimsby, a North
Sea fishing port, adding that a vote against a deal meant "we might never
leave the EU at all".
British MPs will vote on Tuesday on whether to accept May's
Brexit deal, which could include new elements following this weekend's frantic
round of negotiations.
"Next week MPs in Westminster
face a crucial choice: Whether to back the Brexit deal or to reject it,"
Theresa May said.
"Back it and the UK will leave the European Union. Reject it and no one knows what will happen,"
she said.
"We may not leave the EU
for many months, we may leave without the protections that the deal provides.
We may never leave at all."
She added: "Everyone
now wants to get it done, move beyond the arguments, past the bitterness of
the debate and out of the EU as a united country ready to make a success of the
future."
If MPs reject the deal, "nothing is certain", Theresa May said, adding that it would trigger
"a moment
of crisis".
If Theresa May loses Tuesday's vote, MPs will then vote on
Wednesday on whether to leave the EU
on March 29
without a deal.
If MPs reject that outcome, they would then vote on Thursday
on whether to ask the EU for a postponement.
"MPs would immediately be faced with another choice,"
Theresa May explained.
"Either we leave the EU with no deal on March 29. I do
not believe that would be the best outcome for the UK or the EU.
"Or we delay Brexit
and carry on arguing about it, both amongst
ourselves and with the EU. That's not in our interests either.
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