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Frank Augstein

After bruising Brexit-vote defeats, Theresa May to publish legal advice today

The opposition is attempting to have the legal advice published in full.

LAST UPDATE | 5 Dec 2018

UK PRIME MINISTER Theresa May is to publish the full legal advice on her Brexit deal today, after a bruising defeat in the House of Commons.

The House of Commons voted 311-293 to force the government to publish the full legal advice it received from the attorney general about the divorce deal May struck with the European Union last month.

The legal advice will be published at 11.30am today, according to RTÉ.

The government had failed to publish the advice in full despite a resolution passed by MPs last month.

MPs also voted against the government on two other motions – including one that would give MPs the power to decide what to do next if parliament votes down the Brexit deal next week. Although this isn’t legally binding, it gives an indication of May’s support.

May’s critics believe the Attorney General’s report is full of embarrassing details about Britain being forced to follow EU rules for years to come while having no say in its decisions.

Her government argues the prime minister has the right to receive legal advice in private, but after the latest parliamentary defeat promised to release the full report ahead of next Tuesday’s contentious Brexit vote.

“This house has now spoken and it’s of huge constitutional and political significance,” said opposition Labour Party member Keir Starmer.

Lawmakers also backed an amendment that will give them a bigger say in what happens if May’s deal is voted down – an outcome that looks likely.

It would let MPs draft a “Plan B” that May will face intense pressure to follow.

A defeat for the prime minister next week could trigger a no-confidence vote leading to early elections, leaving the Brexit process in utter chaos.

May faced these challenges and the ominous rumblings from disgruntled pro-Brexit members of her own party as she stepped before a packed and agitated session of parliament to kick off five days of intense debate.

Brexit Theresa May is congratulated by Ministers and Conservative MPs in the House of Commons after speaking. PA Wire / PA Images PA Wire / PA Images / PA Images

“The only solution that will endure is one that addresses the concerns of those who voted ‘Leave’ while reassuring those who voted Remain,” May said.

This argument has gone on long enough. It is corrosive to our politics and life depends on compromise.

Her message of unity was interrupted repeatedly by heckling from both pro-EU and Brexit-backing lawmakers.

Opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn called May’s plan “a huge and damaging failure for Britain” that came from “two years of botched negotiations”.

Brexit shambles

The pro-EU camp’s attempts to secure a second referendum on staying in the bloc meanwhile received a sudden boost from an opinion issued by a legal adviser to the European Court of Justice (ECJ).

Advocate General Campos Sanchez-Bordona said Britain had the right to halt the entire Brexit process without the agreement of other EU states.

“That possibility continues to exist until the withdrawal agreement is formally concluded,” he said.

The Scottish National Party’s pro-EU MP Alyn Smith proclaimed: “We now have a roadmap out of the Brexit shambles.”

But May warned that abandoning the negotiated plan “would take us back to square one”.

“We cannot afford to spend the next decade as a country going round in circles on the question of our relationship with the European Union,” she argued.

Renegotiate Brexit?

The vote next week has huge implications for the future of Britain, and that of May herself.

Labour said a defeat for the prime minister would likely trigger a confidence vote to bring down her government.

She has also been constantly challenged by hardline eurosceptics in her own party and might face an internal leadership contest as well.

Hardline Conservative Brexiteers say May’s compromise deal does not represent enough of a break with Brussels.

The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) also objects to special provisions for the North.

The party voted against the government Tuesday, formalising a rupture with May’s Conservatives.

Many of May’s critics want her to go back to Brussels and negotiate a better deal – a prospect that EU leaders have ruled out.

© AFP 2018, with reporting from Gráinne Ní Aodha

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    Mute Simon Burke
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    Dec 11th 2013, 8:35 AM

    I think micro-financing is a brilliant initiative. For those who might be interested there is one, kiva.org, that I have been using for a few years and I couldnt say a negative thing about it. You view peoples profiles and their business ideas and if you like you can loan them as little as $25. I have made many loans and never failed to be paid back. I just have a $100 in my account and its constantly going around in circles to new people.

    Note: I dont work or have any relationship to Kiva other than I use it. I am sure there are other equally clever and reputable services doing the same thing online.

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    Mute Brian Henoll
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    Dec 11th 2013, 9:25 AM

    What a great idea. Just put in $50.

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    Mute Simon Burke
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    Dec 11th 2013, 9:28 AM

    @ Brian Henoll. Thats excellent. Well done.

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    Mute Simon Eales
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    Dec 11th 2013, 8:07 AM

    This is the same nation that sent a space probe to Mars.

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    Mute molly coddled
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    Dec 11th 2013, 8:20 AM

    Sadly India embraces the caste system, which is inequality between classes. That gives you the uber rich and also the uber poor. That is why they can send things into space and have loads of weapons.

    What these women are doing is good and it should be applauded.

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    Mute Annam Kitchen Cork
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    Dec 11th 2013, 12:20 PM

    India’s caste system has less bearing on ones’s economic position that you might think. Higher caste is not necessarily richer. You will find all castes have people from the different folio economic strata.

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    Mute Anthony Quinn
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    Dec 11th 2013, 8:09 AM

    Billions spent on nukes and an army
    What a kip…

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    Mute Gorta.org
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    Dec 11th 2013, 11:17 AM

    Gorta is delighted to support projects like this which have a major impact on local communities. The SCAD project directly assists 3,500 women in the self-help groups. The ripple effect is that these women are aiding an astounding 60,000 more women in their community.
    For full details read Dee Kingston’s daily blog here http://www.gorta.org/blog/gorta-making-difference-india

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    Mute kingstown
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    Dec 11th 2013, 12:56 PM

    What India should do is send a probe to Mars and increase its nuclear arsenal – all at great expense! That should help its citizens out of abject poverty!

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