Brexit latest: Live updates as deal hangs in the balance | CNN

Brexit deal in the balance

BERLIN, GERMANY - FEBRUARY 16: British Prime Minister Theresa May speak to the media following talks between the two leaders at the Chancellery on February 16, 2018 in Berlin, Germany. May is in Germany to attend the Munich Security Conference tomorrow. (Photo by Michele Tantussi/Getty Images)
What's next for Brexit?
01:28 - Source: CNN

What we're covering here

  • Theresa May is defiant: Britain’s PM is standing by her Brexit plan despite widespread opposition.
  • No one has resigned today: Key Cabinet ministers are sticking by May – for now
  • What’s behind the division: The crisis follows May’s announcement that the UK and EU have agreed on the text of a Brexit “withdrawal agreement.”
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Britain has a new Brexit Secretary

Theresa May has made a surprising choice to replace Dominic Raab in the all-important role of Brexit Secretary: Stephen Barclay, who has been serving a junior health minister since January.

Barclay, who voted to leave the European Union, has never served in Cabinet before. But it appears May has found a loyalist to helm the Department for Exiting the EU, as Barclay has never rebelled against the government in parliamentary votes.

Elected to parliament in 2010, Barclay has also held the post of Economic Secretary to the Treasury. He was a director at Barclays bank before beginning his political career.

What it means: While Barclay supported the campaign to leave the European Union, the appointment of such an inexperienced Brexit Secretary will do little to appease pro-Brexit MPs angered by the diminishing importance of the position.

Barclay’s role will be limited to the domestic delivery of Britain’s withdrawal from the EU, the Press Association reported, while Theresa May takes sole control of negotiations with the bloc.

Theresa May starts to rebuild her fractured Cabinet

Amber Rudd returns to the Cabinet as Work and Pensions Secretary

Theresa May has replaced one of the two Cabinet ministers who resigned on Wednesday. She has chosen Amber Rudd to replace Esther McVey as Work and Pensions Secretary, the Press Association and others report.

Rudd resigned in April after admitting she “inadvertently misled” government over targets for the deportation of illegal immigrants, in the wake of the scandal over the wrongful threats of deportation for immigrants of the Windrush generation. An inquiry found earlier this month that she had been given inaccurate information by her officials in the lead-up to the crisis.

What it means: Rudd’s return to frontline politics ensures Theresa May will have a key ally back in her Cabinet. Rudd replaced May as Home Secretary after she was appointed Prime Minister, and was a high-profile defender of May during her time in office.

While her appointment fills one of the posts left empty since yesterday, May is yet to announce a new Brexit Secretary following Dominic Raab’s departure.

A second referendum is now more likely, senior Labour figure says

A second referendum is looking more likely now that Theresa May has unveiled her draft Brexit plan, according to Tom Watson, the deputy leader of UK’s opposition Labour Party.

“We’ve been saying that is on the table for a year-and-a-half. At that time, it seemed very unlikely that there would be a people’s vote, that was the insurance option at the end of a series of unlikely events,” Watson told The House magazine.

“It seems to me that it is more likely given the weakness of Theresa May’s position,” he added. “Given the weakness of her own government, I think it is more likely that we could get there.”

Several Labour MPs have called for a second referendum, or People’s Vote, this week. The party’s position is that it favors a snap general election, but could campaign for a People’s Vote if it fails to achieve one. 

Can the UK withdraw its official notice to leave the EU?

The UK Supreme Court building

Rumbling on in the background to this week’s Brexit drama has been a legal case related to Article 50, the section of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty that governs how member states can leave the bloc.

A cross-party group of remain-supporting lawmakers brought a case in the Scottish courts to seek a ruling on whether the UK government can, unilaterally, withdraw its notification to leave the EU. That notification, issued under Article 50, set in train a two-year countdown clock that expires at midnight, Brussels time, on March 29, 2019.

The UK government, defending the case in Scotland, argued that it did not have the legal right to unilaterally rescind the Article 50 notification.

Unexpectedly the Court of Session, Scotland’s highest court, referred the case to European Court of Justice. The ECJ has scheduled a hearing for November 27, just two days after an emergency summit of European leaders at which they are expected to ratify the UK-EU withdrawal agreement.

In the meantime, the British government appealed to the UK Supreme Court, which in certain cases can overrule decisions by the top court in Scotland. Today, the Supreme Court said it would decide whether it has the legal right to intervene.

Why this matters: It might seem curious that the British government would oppose a case that merely seeks to get legal clarity on Article 50. But the implications are clear – if the ECJ decides that the trigger for Brexit can be undone, remain-supporting lawmakers are sure to call on the government to do just that.

“The Court is aware of the urgency of this matter,” the UK’s Supreme Court said in a statement on the challenge.

It's full steam ahead in Europe

Europe is pressing ahead with its Brexit timetable. Despite the political turmoil in the UK, officials are continuing their preparations for a special summit of EU leaders on November 25, at which the draft withdrawal agreement would be ratified. “Things are running on the right track here in Brussels,” one diplomat told CNN.

The mood was calm at a meeting this morning of the EU27 ambassadors (the 28 EU nations minus the UK), the diplomat said.

That meeting has now ended, with ambassadors due to reconvene on Sunday. Sebastian Kurz, the Chancellor of Austria, which holds the rotating EU presidency, told reporters this morning that the deal is a good one for both sides.

Is a leadership challenge to Theresa May imminent?

Theresa May arrives back at Downing Street after her radio interview this morning

All eyes today are on the number of MPs who have submitted letters demanding a vote no-confidence in Theresa May. The figure required to prompt a showdown is 48 – and Steve Baker, a leading member of the pro-Brexit group of MPs known as the European Research Group, says the threshold could soon be met.

“People have been ringing me and they are telling me that they are putting letters in. I have spoken to colleagues as well and I think we are probably not far off. I think it is probably imminent,” Baker told the BBC. “If it comes to a vote, Theresa May will lose it,” he predicted.

But he admitted that only Graham Brady, the chairman of the all-important 1922 Committee of Conservative MPs, knows the true number.

The number of MPs who have publicly confirmed that they’ve sent letters to Brady currently stands at 21, according to CNN’s count. But MPs don’t usually go public, so the true number is anyone’s guess.

Boost for May as another key Cabinet minister decides to stay on

There’s more good news for Theresa May. Britain’s International Trade Secretary Liam Fox, one of the pro-Brexit voices who remains in May’s Cabinet, confirms he won’t be resigning. “I think you can assume that quite clearly,” he told CNN’s Max Foster, when asked if he’d be staying put.

That follows the confirmation by another Brexiteer Cabinet minister, Michael Gove, that he was staying on. “The greatest price that could be paid would be to have no Brexit at all… I think that is far too high a price to pay,” Fox said.

But he admitted that recent days and weeks have not been plain sailing.

He gave an insight into the marathon five-hour Cabinet session on Wednesday, at which the draft Brexit deal was reluctantly agreed, and which precipitated the resignation of Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab.

“We’ve been very frank about our views in Cabinet,” he said, calling Wednesday’s Downing Street meeting “a pretty no-holds-barred conversation… There were some very passionate views expressed at that meeting.”

Watch the full interview:

A Cabinet minister is not resigning. And that's big.

Michael Gove talks to reporters outside the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

Ordinarily, someone not doing something isn’t big news. But in this case, it is.

Michael Gove, a leading pro-Brexit Cabinet member and Theresa May’s Environment Secretary, has told reporters that he won’t be resigning from Theresa May’s Cabinet over her draft Brexit agreement.

“I am looking forward to continuing to work with all colleagues in government and in Parliament to get the best future for Britain,” he said outside his department this morning. When asked if he has confidence in the Prime Minister, Gove added, “I absolutely do.”

Why this is important: The news will come as a huge relief to May, who can ill afford to lose more pro-Brexit members of her government after being hit by seven resignations yesterday. A Downing Street spokeswoman said May “is very pleased that he will continue doing the important work he is doing there,” according to Britain’s Press Association.

In her interview with radio station LBC this morning, May did not deny reports that she offered Gove the job of Brexit Secretary, only to have him turn it down.

Former top UK official blasts ex-Brexit Secretary

David Davis, the former Brexit Secretary who resigned from May’s Cabinet when she set out her negotiating position at her Chequers retreat in July, has come under fire from a former senior civil servant for comments he made on BBC Radio this morning.

In an interview with Radio 4’s Today program, Davis accused the European Union of slow-walking the negotiations in order to put pressure on the British side. “The European Union has spun this out deliberately to use time against us,” Davis said.

That angered Simon Fraser, who was the permanent secretary at the Foreign Office – the most senior career civil servant in that department – between 2010 and 2015. Fraser said on Twitter that it was a “preposterous” statement and that the delays came from the British side.

Second referendum remains "on the table"

A senior member of Britain’s opposition Labour Party, John McDonnell, has said a “compromise” Brexit deal could still be reached by parliament.

“People have looked over the edge of a no-deal Brexit and realized it could be catastrophic for our economy,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today program this morning. “What is emerging within the House of Commons now is almost a unity platform to avoid a no deal.”

But McDonnell, the Shadow Chancellor, added that Labour’s ultimate objective is to secure a snap general election – and said that the party could still call for a second referendum if that goal isn’t achieved.

“If we can’t get a deal that does respect [the referendum] and at the same time protects jobs and the economy, our priority is for a general election. But if we can’t get that, yes - a People’s Vote remains on the table,” he said.

The comments echo those made by Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn in an email sent out to the party’s members last night.

Key Cabinet minister refuses to say whether he will resign

The British Environment Secretary, Michael Gove, is widely reported to be thinking about resigning, after he apparently declined Theresa May’s offer to appoint him Brexit Secretary yesterday. (The position is open after the resignation of the previous incumbent, Dominic Raab.)

Gove was mobbed by reporters and camera crews outside his London home as he left for work, and again when he arrived at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. Apart from wishing the media “good morning,” he didn’t say anything.

By the time he arrived at his office, he appeared to have acquired his breakfast. He’ll need the sustenance for the decisions he will have to make today.

Breakfast update: It appears that Michael Gove is carrying a paper bag from Patisserie Valerie, a British cafe chain that’s in deep financial trouble. Is this a subtle message? Its chief executive resigned on Thursday. His name? (Paul) May.

May refuses to rule out "free vote" on Brexit deal

The British Prime Minister has declined to say whether she would allow a so-called free vote for members of her government when (or possibly if) the Brexit deal comes before the UK Parliament.

Ordinarily, ministers must vote according to government policy, or else resign or be fired. But if the party leadership grants a free vote, they would be able to vote according with their own views, even if that means voting against the government.

Asked on LBC Radio whether she would allow a free vote on the Brexit deal, Theresa May replied: “There is cabinet collective responsibly in this country… You’re asking me to look at issues around the vote before we’ve even finalized issues with the European Union.”

Why this is important: Another Cabinet minister who’s believed to be considering her position, International Development Secretary Penny Mordaunt, reportedly asked the Prime Minister to permit a free vote. That would allow Mordaunt to remain in the Cabinet. It looks like May is keeping the option on the table.

May dodges question on whether she should quit

Theresa May is driven away from the LBC studios after her phone-in

In her radio phone-in today, a caller asked Theresa May whether she ought to resign, having failed – in the caller’s view  – to achieve a Brexit deal that honored the result of the 2016 referendum.

She responded by defending her deal and ignoring the call to stand aside.

What you need to know: The British Prime Minister has shown remarkable resilience. She made it clear in her Thursday press conference that she wasn’t going anywhere, saying she wanted to see her deal through. It now seems unlikely that May will quit of her own accord. That’s why Westminster is waiting to see if enough members of May’s Conservative Party move to unseat her.

Will any more Cabinet ministers resign today?

The British press is awash with rumors that more British government ministers will resign over Theresa May’s Brexit deal today.

Chief among the apparent waverers is Michael Gove, the Environment Secretary. Prime Minister Theresa May is reported to have offered Gove, a leading Brexiteer, the vacant job of Brexit Secretary yesterday. He is said to have turned it down, after May rebuffed his demand that he be allowed to change the terms of the Brexit deal.

May was asked by LBC’s Nick Ferrari whether the reports were true. “I don’t talk about things to do with the cabinet reshuffle,” she said, adding that she’ll be appointing a new Brexit Secretary “over the next day or so.”

“I don’t bet on anything to do with politics,” she said when asked to wager on who would take up the position.

What you need to know: If Gove resigns, he would be the the tenth Cabinet minister to quit in just over a year.

Theresa May takes questions on radio phone-in

The embattled British Prime Minister Theresa May is taking questions on LBC Radio this morning. The London-based station is live streaming the show.

Theresa May says she'll see Brexit through

Theresa May stands by her Brexit plan in front of gathered reporters.

Asked about whether she would fight a confidence vote, Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May swiped at her critics, saying her draft deal was in the national interest and she was determined to see it through.

“Leadership is about taking the right decisions, not the easy ones,” May told reporters. “As Prime Minister my job is to bring back a deal that delivers on the vote of the British people. I believe this is a deal which does deliver that, which is in the national interest and am I going to see this through? Yes.”

While May conceded that “uncomfortable decisions” have had to be made, and that she understood that some were unhappy with those compromises. But she underlined that her deal delivered what people voted for.

Pub TVs broadcast Theresa May's news conference

Customers in the Red Lion pub – close to the House of Commons in Westminster – watch televisions broadcasting Theresa May’s news conference in which she said the plan she’s set out for Brexit is the right one for the country.

Breaking: Theresa May vows to fight for her Brexit plan

Theresa May speaking to journalists on Thursday evening.

Theresa May vowed in a news conference on Thursday evening to fight for her Brexit deal – despite a slew of ministerial resignations.

“Serving in high office is an honor and privilege,” she told a room of reporters.

“It is also a heavy responsibility – that is true at any time but especially when the stakes are so high.

“I believe with every fiber of my being that the course I have set out is the right one for our country and all our people.

“From the very beginning I have known what I wanted to deliver for the British people to honor their vote in the referendum.”

Watch more from May:

Why the draft Brexit deal is so divisive

EU chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier, left, and European Council President Donald Tusk flip through the pages of a draft withdrawal agreement in Brussels on Thursday. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)

The full 585-page Brexit draft withdrawal agreement that everyone is arguing about today is long, complex, and contains several highly contentious clauses. We’ve read it so you don’t have to. Here are some of the key takeaways:

Transition period: Britain will formally exit the EU on Friday, March 29, 2019, at which point it will cease to be involved at any level in EU decision-making. However, under the draft agreement, the UK will stay inside the bloc’s single market and remain subject to EU laws and regulations until the end of December 2020 while the two sides attempt to iron out a new trade relationship.

Irish border and customs union: There will be no hard border between Northern Ireland, which is part of the UK, and EU member the Republic of Ireland, at least in the short term. In the event of the transition period being extended beyond 2020, the draft deal commits both parties to a “backstop” solution, consisting of a “single customs territory between the (European) Union and the United Kingdom.”

Financial markets: Under the draft agreement, “entities established in the United Kingdom shall be treated as entities located outside the Union.” In practice, this is likely to result in London’s financial center being granted a level of EU market access similar to that granted to US and Japanese firms, under an arrangement known as “equivalence,” potentially jeopardizing London’s attractiveness to international financial companies.

Freedom of movement: The draft document provides protections for the more than three million EU citizens in the UK, and over one million UK nationals in EU countries to continue to live, work or study as they currently do. Crucially, “no exit visa, entry visa or equivalent formality shall be required of holders of a valid document issued” for EU and UK nationals when crossing national boarders within the bloc.

If you still can’t get enough of Brexit, you can read the full text of the draft withdrawal agreement here.

Happening soon: Theresa May to hold news conference

Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May is due to hold a news conference shortly at Downing Street after a day of turmoil following a series of dramatic resignation over her Brexit deal.

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