четверг, 21 марта 2019 г.

Theresa May is on a doomed mission to renegotiate Brexit

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British Prime Minister Theresa May is on a doomed mission to renegotiated her Brexit deal. The UK Parliament voted on Tuesday to send the prime minister back to Brussels to win concessions from the European Union on the Brexit withdrawal agreement — something the EU has already said is impossible. Members of Parliament are specifically requesting that May revisit the part of the deal referred to as the Irish backstop. This is basically an insurance policy to prevent the establishment of a hard border between Northern Ireland (which is part of the UK) and the Republic of Ireland (part of the EU) after Brexit. (This video explains why it’s a big deal.) Conservative pro-Brexit lawmakers believe the backstop, as it’s currently laid out in the Brexit agreement, will trap the UK in the EU indefinitely. They want May to go back to the EU and find “alternative arrangements” to the current plan — but what those alternative arrangements might be has not been specified. If you’re thinking, man, this sucks for May, wait a moment. Her government supported the amendment, basically admitting in the process that her original Brexit plan was flawed, and reneging on her previous remarks that this was “the only Brexit deal possible.” May told members of Parliament after the vote Tuesday that her government “will now take this mandate forward and seek ... legally binding changes.” But she admitted that “there is limited appetite for such a change in the EU, and renegotiating it will not be easy.” The EU put it a little differently: There’s no chance of renegotiations. “The backstop is part of the Withdrawal Agreement, and the Withdrawal Agreement is not open for renegotiation,” a spokesperson for EU Council President Donald Tusk wrote in a statement on Tuesday. Breaking - immediate EU reaction to commons #Brexit vote - this from ⁦@eucopresident⁩ spokesman - ⁦@SkyNews⁩ pic.twitter.com/b2srvEjDMd— Mark Stone (@Stone_SkyNews) January 29, 2019 So May’s mission to Brussels appears to be doomed. If she fails to get the EU to budge, then perhaps she’ll finally convince the deal’s (many) opponents tha