Prime Minister Theresa May is making headway in efforts to amend the terms of Brexit and is hoping for further
progress when she meets EU leaders in Egypt, a cabinet colleague said Sunday.
But Environment Secretary Michael Gove downplayed the prospect of a
breakthrough that could allow the House of Commons to vote again on the
withdrawal agreement this week.
“I understand that progress is being made,” he told BBC television. Asked
whether a new vote by MPs was imminent, he said: “I don’t know.”
May was headed Sunday to an EU-Arab League summit in the Egyptian resort
of Sharm el-Sheikh.
“It’s an opportunity for her to talk to other EU leaders in order to try
to make further progress,” Gove said, as Brexit day looms on March 29. May
has face-to-face talks planned with European Council president Donald Tusk,
Germany’s Angela Merkel and Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar.
After MPs rejected her withdrawal deal last month, May is seeking to amend
its most controversial element, the so-called Irish backstop clause.
This would keep Britain in a customs union with the EU after Brexit if and
until another way — for example, a free trade deal — were found to keep the
border with Ireland free-flowing.
The EU has said it will not reopen the text, but is looking at what
“guarantees” could be given to reassure MPs that the backstop would be
temporary.
Gove said the government was still discussing various ways to address MPs’
concerns with the EU.
“It could be a time limit, it could be a unilateral exit mechanism,” he
said — citing two options Brussels has publicly rejected.
He added: “And it could be another legally powerful protocol or addition
to the treaty that makes it clear that we would not be bound in the backstop
indefinitely against our will.”
May has promised to update parliament on her efforts on Tuesday and either
put hold a new vote on the deal or allow MPs on Wednesday to debate their own
ideas for the way forward.
Three of her cabinet ministers on Saturday warned that if there was no
breakthrough this week then parliament would vote to delay Brexit rather than
risk leaving the EU with no deal.
Speaking to activists in her Conservative party on Saturday, May said: “In the very final stages of this process, the worst thing we could do is lose our focus.”
(AFP)