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UK parliament endorses PM May's Brexit delay request

British lawmakers on Tuesday have approved a government motion that would enable Prime Minister Theresa May to ask the EU for a Brexit extension to June 30. The motion was brought by the government after a legislation that forces May to request an extension rather than a no-deal Brexit. The motion gained the support of 420 MPs while it was being rejected by 110 lawmakers in the House of Commons, receiving a majority of 310.

Reuters WORLD
Published April 09,2019
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British lawmakers endorsed Prime Minister Theresa May's request to the European Union to delay Brexit until June 30 at a vote in parliament on Tuesday, adding weight to the pitch she will make to EU leaders in Brussels.

The majority of May's Conservative Party voted alongside the opposition Labour Party to back the prime minister's approach by 420 votes to 110. The main rebellion came from pro-Brexit Conservatives who want Brexit to happen sooner.

"We should all be very clear what this extension would be for - it is all about making sure we leave the EU in a timely and orderly way and that means leaving with a deal," government Solicitor-General Robert Buckland said ahead of the vote.

The debate came as May travelled to Berlin and Paris to drum up support for her request for more time to try and find a new plan for Britain's EU exit that can command the support of her political opponents at home.

The vote itself was the culmination of an unprecedented power grab in parliament by lawmakers who this week passed a law against the government's wishes, seeking guarantees that May would not let Britain leave the EU without a deal on April 12.

But because May has already requested a delay, and with no alternative dates chosen to be voted on by lawmakers on Tuesday, the vote was not a major flashpoint in the country's long-running political crisis over how to deliver Brexit.

Nevertheless, the process of passing a law to trigger Tuesday's debate has further undermined May's political authority, proving parliament is able and willing to circumvent the government if they disagree with her choices on Brexit.

Labour Party junior Brexit spokesman Matthew Pennycook said his party supported May's extension plan, but warned the extra time must be used to try and find a compromise with Labour and not to pass her own thrice-rejected deal at a fourth attempt.

"The public will not forgive the government if an extension is sought and agreed under the pretence of efforts to secure cross-party compromise," he said.