1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
Politics

UK PM May says no support for third vote on withdrawal deal

March 25, 2019

Theresa May says she is still trying to build support for her Brexit deal, which has twice failed in Parliament. Britain could leave the EU without a Brexit deal on April 12 if she fails to break the impasse.

Theresa May
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/empics/PA Wire/House of Commons

British Prime Minister Theresa May conceded on Monday that she did not have enough support to present her divorce deal from the EU for a new vote in Parliament.

The deal would need to be passed by Parliament this week if Britain is to meet a new May 22 Brexit deadline.

Read more: Brexit: In multicultural east London, locals look to future with fear

What did May say?

  • "There is still not sufficient support in the House to bring back the deal for a third meaningful vote."
  • She hoped this would change later in the week.
  • She is skeptical about holding nonbinding votes on alternative Brexit plans.
  • Parliament should respect the 2016 Brexit referendum result rather than mull a second referendum.
  • Her government is continuing to plan for a no-deal Brexit.
  • She will not lead Britain out of the EU without a deal unless Parliament votes for this option.

Read more:EU offers UK Brexit extension options, initially to April 12 

'Indicative votes'

Following May's statement, lawmakers were set to vote on whether to hold nonbinding "indicative votes" on possible alternatives to her Brexit deal. Media reports say the alternatives to be put to the vote on Wednesday could include:

  • having Britain maintain much closer trade ties than envisaged by the prime minister's deal;
  • holding a second referendum on whether to actually leave the EU after all;
  • the "nuclear option" of revoking Article 50, i.e. canceling Brexit.

What happens next? If May's deal is not accepted by Parliament in a "meaningful" vote this week, lawmakers will have to vote on whether to accept the extension to April 12.

If they do, options include:

  • leaving with no deal on April 12;
  • canceling Brexit;
  • requesting even more time.

The last option would entail the UK voting in EU elections in May, something Brexiteers are anxious to avoid. If they do not, the legal ramifications are unclear.

Why is May's deal unpopular? Many lawmakers want to see the UK stay in a customs union with the EU or remain in the EU Single Market, both of which go against May's position. A customs union would preclude the UK from making independent free trade deals. Single Market membership would stop the UK from controlling migration from other EU countries.

Where are we with Brexit? May's deal for leaving the bloc has twice failed to win parliamentary support. The EU agreed last week to extend a March 29 deadline, giving Britain until April 12 to decide on what kind of a Brexit it wants if the deal does not pass Parliament and until May 22 if it does.

Read more: Stop Brexit: Millions sign petition to British government  

 tj/amp (AFP, dpa)

Each evening at 1830 UTC, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.

Skip next section Explore more
Skip next section DW's Top Story

DW's Top Story

Skip next section More stories from DW