No-deal Brexit rejected in UK Parliament

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Here's what you need to know about Brexit
03:38 - Source: CNN

What we're covering

What’s happening??British lawmakers have rejected a possible no-deal Brexit.

What’s next??Parliament will vote Thursday night on whether to request a Brexit extension.

When is Brexit happening??The United Kingdom is due to leave the European Union in 16 days – on March 29.

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We'll be back tomorrow

In case you missed all the action, here’s our coverage of this evening’s vote, which saw British lawmakers decisively reject a no-deal Brexit, inflicting another heavy defeat on Prime Minister Theresa May.

We’ll be back in the morning, London time, with live updates as MPs debate and then vote on whether Parliament wants an extension to the Brexit deadline. You can follow that here.

A third meaningful vote?

After not one, but two failed attempts at getting parliament to agree upon her Brexit deal, Theresa May is pushing the prospect of a third vote on the deal within the next seven days.

Tomorrow, the House of Commons will vote on a motion that says the government will seek a “one-off extension” for the Brexit deadline from the EU—if Parliament agrees to a deal by March 20.

But in such a short time, what changes can May make to the deal, to win MPs’ support?

Reactions from Europe

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas tweeted that tonight’s no-deal vote is a “signal of reason” from London.

“The House of Commons has shown that the majority does not want a no-deal. A no-deal is in nobody’s interest, we have made that clear again and again,” Maas wrote.

Roberto Gualtieri, chairman of the European Parliament’s economic and monetary affairs committee, said it was a “positive” move that British MPs rejected a no-deal Brexit, but reiterated that Europe needs to know what the UK “is in favor of.”

He said that British Prime Minister Theresa May is “running out of options.”

“Work with Labour for [a] closer EU-UK relationship or put [the] question back to the people,” he suggested.

Gualtieri wasn’t the only one suggesting May should work closer with the UK’s main opposition party.

Udo Bullmann, a Member of the European Parliament from Germany, said it was time for May to “engage seriously” with Jeremy Corbyn, adding “there is no more time to waste.”

17 Conservative MPs defy the Prime Minister

A total of 17 Conservative MPs defied British Prime Minister Theresa May by voting for her motion to reject any possibility of a no-deal Brexit.

May had attempted to whip against her own motion, according to a government source, after it was worded more strongly than she had originally proposed.

The whipping failed after MPs voted for it 321 to 278.

Among those from May’s party who voted to rule out a possible no-deal Brexit was work and pensions minister Sarah Newton. She resigned shortly after the vote, becoming the 15th minister from May’s government to resign over Brexit.

Votes by party to the motion ruling out a no-deal Brexit.

It’s worth remembering that tonight’s vote can’t actually change the UK’s legal position, which is that without deal – or unless the EU agrees to delay Brexit – Britain will crash out of the bloc in just over two weeks.?

No plans for PM to return to Brussels for negotiations, her spokesman says

British Prime Minister Theresa May has no plans to return to Brussels for more negotiations after lawmakers voted today to avoid a no-deal Brexit, her spokesman said according to Britain’s Press Association.

The UK government also has no plans for indicative votes.

“What you have seen in Parliament in recent weeks is a series of plans being put before Parliament by opposition parties and they have all been rejected,” the spokesman added.

What happens next?

On Thursday, the UK Parliament will vote on another motion over whether to delay the divorce process beyond the March 29 deadline.

The government’s motion will ask MPs to back an extension until June 30, in order to pass EU exit legislation. Any extension would need to be approved by the EU.

The motion also points out that any extension beyond June 30 “would require the United Kingdom to hold European Parliament elections in May.”

Theresa May whipped against her own motion, then lost

An interesting nugget from tonight’s drama: after the amendment taking no deal off the table under any circumstances, the government whipped against voting for the main motion.

A government source explained to CNN that once the Spelman amendment passed, it made the motion unacceptable as it directly contradicted government policy.

So May tried to whip against her own motion and lost. You’ve got to feel sorry for the PM some days.

A delay to Brexit is "now inevitable," opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn says

The leader of the UK’s main opposition party has told MPs that an extension to Article 50 — which would delay the UK’s exit from the EU — is “now inevitable.”

Labour’s Jeremy Corbyn said that Parliament now must “take control” of the Brexit process, adding that his party will hold cross-party meetings to “find a compromised solution that can command support in the House.”

He said MPs needed to find a solution to “deal with the crisis” facing the UK and the “deep concerns” of the British public.

It is not enough to vote against no deal, you have to agree to a deal: EU spokesperson

Reacting to tonight’s vote in the House of Commons, an EU spokesperson has said: “There are only two ways to leave the EU: with or without a deal.”

“To take no deal off the table, it is not enough to vote against no deal – you have to agree to a deal,” the spokesperson said.

“We have agreed a deal with the Prime Minister and the EU is ready to sign it.”

The spokesperson added the EU is prepared for both a deal and no-deal Brexit.

No-deal remains the default if a deal isn't supported, May reminds MPs

British Prime Minister Theresa May has reiterated to MPs that while they have voted to reject a no-deal Brexit, it remains the default option if the UK cannot reach a deal with the EU.

“The legal default in EU and UK law is that the UK will leave without a deal unless something else is agreed,” May said. “The onus is now on every one of us in this House to find out what that is.”

Prime Minister Theresa May speaking in parliament after the vote.

May added that lawmakers will have the chance to vote on Thursday over whether to request an extension to Article 50.

The Prime Minister said if MPs can support a deal “in the coming days,” it will allow the government to seek a short delay to Brexit. However, if parliament cannot agree upon a deal May has warned that the delay will have to be longer.

“Such an extension would undoubtedly require the UK to hold European Parliament elections in May 2019,” May said. “I do not think that would be the right outcome. But the House needs to face up to the consequences of the decisions it has taken.”

BREAKING: No deal Brexit opposed by British lawmakers

British lawmakers have voted against a no-deal Brexit, amid fears it could lead to economic turmoil and stoke long-simmering tensions in Northern Ireland.

The result paves the way for a vote on Thursday on whether to delay the divorce process beyond the March 29 deadline.

Lawmakers voted 321 votes to 278, backing an amended version of Prime Minister Theresa May’s motion on Wednesday that “rejects the United Kingdom leaving the European Union without a Withdrawal Agreement.”?

The vote is only indicative. The default is that in the absence of a deal, Britain crashes out of the EU on March 29.??

HAPPENING NOW: UK parliament vote on motion to reject a no-deal Brexit in any circumstance

Results are expected in under 15 minutes.

UK parliament rejects amendment seeking a delay to Brexit

British MPs have rejected the amendment which sought to delay Brexit until May 22 for further preparations to take place in order to mitigate the impact of a no-deal Brexit should no agreement be reached.

Confused? While lawmakers approved an amendment earlier that rejects a no-deal Brexit at any time under any circumstances, it is a non-binding vote. If no agreement can be reached before the UK is due to leave the EU, a no-deal Brexit can still happen should the EU not accept a request to extend article 50.

HAPPENING NOW: Lawmakers vote on whether to seek a delay to Brexit, but...

… delay Brexit in order to mitigate the impact of a no-deal Brexit, should no agreement be reached.

Results expected in under 15 minutes.

UK parliament approves no-deal amendment

British MPs have approved the amendment that rejects a no-deal Brexit at any time in any circumstances.

They now will vote on another amendment to tonight’s motion which calls for a delay of Brexit until May 22, for further preparations to take place. It also acknowledges a definitive departure from the EU in 2021.

Editor’s note: This post has been updated to correct the proposed extension month.

Happening now: UK lawmakers vote on amendment that rejects a no-deal Brexit at any time, under any circumstances

Results expected in under 15 minutes.

Will Brexit break up the UK?

The European Union might not be the only union facing a break up over Brexit.

Political parties in Northern Ireland and Scotland, which both voted to Remain in the EU, are seizing on the political paralysis in Westminster to push their independent agendas.

For Ireland its led by political party Sinn Fein.

The party leader Mary Lou McDonald told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour that Brexit is an opportunity to unite Northern Ireland with the Republic.

“A referendum on Irish unity will be absolutely essential”, she says, if the UK leaves the EU without a deal.

“We have a situation where the North of Ireland take a democratic decision, they reject Brexit, and yet, due to the sovereignty of Westminster, Brexit can be imposed.”

And, it’s a similar story in Scotland.?

Calls are growing here once again for a second referendum - not just on Brexit, but on their membership of the UK as well.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon says the case “the case for Scotland becoming an independent country has never been stronger.”

19-year-old student Abbie Archibald.

19-year-old student Abbie Archibald was too young to vote in any of the previous votes, but now she has come of age.

Given the chance she’d vote to Remain in the EU, but she doesn’t think it would be democratic to do a do-over on Brexit.

It’s a different story however when it comes to the possibility of another vote on Scottish independence – she would vote to leave the UK.

“The circumstances are completely different,” she says.

“We’re now potentially not going to be a part of the EU, and Scotland could have the chance to thrive as its own country.”

50-year-old building surveyor and part-time piper Angus Mackenzie.

The threat of Brexit was a decisive factor in the Scottish independence referendum, says Angus MacKenzie, a Building Surveyor and part-time piper.

In the last vote for Scottish independence he voted to stay in the UK.?Now, if there is a hard Brexit, he would vote to leave.

“All the arguments that were against independence, are the arguments for it now.?It’s twisted round”, he tells me.

“One major argument was keeping our currency, but now the euro looks set to outperform the British pound.?Another argument was wanting to stay in the EU, but now that has gone.”

73-year-old retiree Bob Gilchrist (left).

For those Scots who want to remain in the UK, the effect Brexit is having on the independence argument is alarming.

Bob Gilchrist wanted to stay in the EU, but that Brexit disappointment aside, he still wants to remain in the UK.

“There’s so much division and conflict now, who knows what people are going to vote for,” he says.

“In some ways your heart says it be nice to be independent, because we get dragged into a lot of this UK discussions without wanting to, but to me, the idea of Scotland being independent, particularly economically, is just a bit of a nonsense.”

51-year-old Fiona Vina who works at the University of Edinburgh.

Meanwhile, for many – like Fiona Vine who works at the prestigious University of Edinburgh, political fatigue is weighing heavily on many minds.

She says that while calls within the SNP may be growing for another Scottish Independence vote, it might not spread beyond, given the current state of upheaval.

“I’m not sure if there is appetite for that to happen again I think people are weary of politics.”

MP tries to withdraw amendment which rejects a no-deal Brexit under any circumstances

Conservative MP Caroline Spelman, who proposed the amendment which rejects a no-deal Brexit at any time and under any circumstances, has told parliament that she no longer was backing it.

Spelman said she appreciated the “offers of support from other parties” but that Prime Minister Theresa May’s motion offered a greater opportunity to get a “really large majority.”

However John Bercow, the speaker of the House of Commons, quickly intervened and said she could not simply withdraw it.

“If she puts forward an amendment then chooses not to move it, that’s for her judgment and people will make their own assessment of that,” Bercow said, adding: “It’s perfectly possible for other signatories to (the amendment) who do stick with the wish to persist with it, to do so.”

Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow said Spelman could not withdraw her amendment.

Government hints at indicative Brexit votes

British MPs may have the opportunity to vote on alternative Brexit proposals tomorrow, Environment Secretary Michael Gove hinted earlier in the House of Commons.

When asked by an MP if the Government would grant a series of “indicative votes” on how the UK should leave the EU, Gove said it would depend “how the House votes today” and that there may be an opportunity tomorrow.

He added that it was important that parliament finds consensus on Brexit “as quickly as we possibly can.”

Labour pressed on whether it will support a second referendum

Shadow Brexit Secretary Keir Starmer speaking in parliament.

Labour continues to be challenged on whether it will in fact back a second referendum, after opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn flirted with the idea last month if Theresa May’s Brexit deal was rejected.

Speaking in parliament, Shadow Brexit Secretary Keir Starmer told MPs that Labour supports a public vote to “protect” the UK against May’s “red lines” and a no-deal Brexit.

Asked if Labour would support a motion or amendment for a “people’s vote,” Starmer reiterated that it would, adding that “timing depends on discussions across the House and with others, but that’s the clear position that we put down.”

Labour MP asks why a new referendum on Brexit is "undemocratic"

Hilary Benn from the UK’s main opposition Labour Party has asked Environment Secretary Michael Gove why it is “democratic” for the government to present parliamentarians with a deal that’s already been defeated, but “undemocratic” to allow a new public vote on whether the UK should actually leave the EU.

“Why is it democratic to keep bringing back to the House a proposition that has been overwhelmingly defeated on two occasions on the one hand, but on the other hand it’s somehow undemocratic to suggest that the British people should be asked if they want to change their minds?” Labour’s Benn asked.

MPs broke into laughter when Gove defended May’s Brexit deal, saying it “was significantly different” from her last proposition.

The Environment Secretary then went on to call out Labour’s “flip-flop” after not pursuing its original position that endorsed a second referendum.

MPs "face a number of unattractive choices"

Speaking in parliament, Environment Secretary Michael Gove said Members of Parliament faced a “number of unattractive choices.”

“It is important that the House realizes that all of these choices are less attractive than support for the deal that the Prime Minister negotiated,” Gove said.

“We can choose as a House to leave without a deal, but there are significant economic, political and constitutional challenges if we embark on that course,” he warned, adding that it would also “undermine and further erode faith in democracy.”

Environment Secretary opens debate by praising May for her "unselfish and unstinting patriotism"

Environment Secretary Michael Gove, who has opened today’s debate on a no-deal Brexit on behalf of Theresa May, began by praising the Prime Minister, who has lost her voice.

“She may have temporarily lost her voice but what she has not lost – and will never lose – is a focus on the national interest and a full-hearted desire to do what is right for our country,” Gove, a prominent Brexiteer who has been consistently loyal to May, said.

He added that May has “always puts country first” and has spent “more than 19 hours at the despatch box … has shown fortitude, tenacity, thoughtfulness, diligence – and above all an unselfish and unstinting patriotism.”

Environment Secretary Michael Gove opened the no-deal Brexit debate in the House of Commons.

What happens after today's vote? Brexit scenarios explained

Which amendments will MPs be debating today?

Two amendments to Prime Minister Theresa May’s motion on crashing out of the European Union without a deal have been selected by Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow.

May’s motion states that the House “declines to approve” leaving the EU on March 29 without a withdrawal agreement or future relationship framework, and notes that leaving without a deal remains the default position unless the UK and EU ratify an agreement

The amendments to be debated by MPs and that could later be put up for a vote are:

Amendment (a) Rejects a no-deal Brexit at any time and under any circumstances.

Amendment (f) Calls for a delay to Brexit day from March 22 until May 22, 2019, for further preparations to take place, but acknowledges a definitive departure in 2021.

Beware the Ides of March?

“Beware the Ides of March.” So goes the famous line from William Shakespeare’s play “Julius Caesar.”

British politicians would do well to heed the playwright’s warning for Brexit as well.

The Ides of March, marked on March 15 on the Roman calendar, is best known as the date of Caesar’s assassination in the year 44 BC.?

This year, it arrives on Friday.?

By that time, Parliament will have likely voted to take a no-deal Brexit scenario off the table. They also, according to most predictions, will have voted to ask the EU for an extension to Article 50 and the March 29 deadline.

But what next?

Everything it seems is then on the table: Theresa May’s premiership and even Brexit itself.

"I think we should be friends": Tusk shares letter from six-year-old in London

Earlier today European Council President Donald Tusk shared on Instagram an apparently pointed Brexit letter from a six-year-old girl in London.

“Dear Mr Tusk, I live in Britain,” the letter reads. “I know we are leaving the EU. But I think we should be friends.”

The letter also included a drawing of a unicorn, a reference that has often been used by lawmakers and commentators to symbolize the UK approach to Brexit negotiations.

Tusk responded to the letter on his social media, writing: “We will always be friends, Sophie.”

Guy Verhofstadt, the chief Brexit negotiator for the European parliament, also shared the letter on Twitter, adding that “sometimes it takes a child to put everything in perspective.”

“Sometimes it takes a child to put everything in perspective,” he tweeted. “What a terrible waste Brexit is.

Theresa May will not open no-deal debate

Prime Minister Theresa May, who is suffering a sore throat, will not open today’s Commons debate on a no-deal Brexit as planned. Instead, Environment Secretary Michael Gove will kick it off.

Trading one troubled border for another

At the City Turkish Barber in Derry – also known as Londonderry – in Northern Ireland, Merwan Aytas reflects on swapping one troubled border for another.?

Aytas came here from southeast Turkey, home to tens of thousands of Syrian refugees. Now he lives four miles from the border with the Republic of Ireland, which has an uncertain status as the Brexit imbroglio continues.?

Shrugging as he seats another customer, Aytas says, “Twenty percent of our clients we get from the other side of the border.” Border checks or disruption would deter people from coming to Derry for a haircut and shopping, he added.

City Turkish Barber in Derry, also known as Londonderry, in Northern Ireland.

A customer called Michael joins in. He recalls the enormous lines of vehicles at the border during The Troubles, a decades-long sectarian conflict over Northern Ireland’s place in the United Kingdom. The open border that came with the 1998 Good Friday Agreement changed all that, and was a boon for retailers in the North.?

“We need a soft border because the majority of business is done between the North and South,” he says. “I can’t be sitting at checkpoints and customs.”

But Michael and Merwan are pessimistic about efforts to keep the border open. “It’s not going to happen,” Michael says, despite the UK government’s promise that there will be, in the event of a no-deal Brexit, no checks at the border.

And that’s because, in his view, “it’s not down to the UK, it’s down to the EU,” as the 200-mile border between the Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic will become, in effect, part of the EU’s external frontier.?

Aytas sits a customer down for a haircut.

Aytas agrees, “There will be definitely a hard border eventually, it doesn’t matter what Theresa May says.”

There’s not much time in the City Turkish Barber for the politicians at Westminster.

“They can all sit and laugh and joke in Parliament, but in the end it’s us that affected,” Aytas says, adding that local politicians are equally to blame.?

It’s just the sort of response we got on both sides of the sectarian divide in Belfast at the weekend. People are fed up with the Brexit process and feel more important things – jobs and social issues such as drug abuse – are being neglected.?

Aytas is still happy to be living in Derry. Reflecting on his move from Turkey, he says, “At least our politicians around here don’t support ISIS.”

"We're being led by a bunch of idiots": The view from Whitby

At a tea shack in Whitby, a seaside town on England’s northeast coast, fishermen say they feel betrayed by how Brexit has devolved.

“I’m frightened by it. I think she will give way on her red lines that will again not be good for the fishermen,” Richard Brewer, a local fisherman, said, referring to UK Prime Minister Theresa May.

Much of Britain’s fishing industry voted to leave the European Union, in the hope of gaining independence from EU quotas and, in effect, “taking back control” of the UK’s waters.

Graham Collinson (right), who runs a local holiday homes business, having a coffee with Steve Hartley (left), a Whitby resident and retiree.

Braving the blistering wind and sipping a coffee outside Clara’s Cafe, Graham Collinson has a different perspective and says that Brexit is already hurting his local business, Discovery Accomodations.

“Fifty percent of our workers came from Europe,” Collinson said, adding that “we can’t get them to come” anymore.

Sitting beside Collinson is retiree Steve Hartley, who thinks that Brexit is bound to hurt the next generations the most.

“It’s a young person’s decision, it’s for the younger half of society to decide,” Hartley said.

EU hasn't given up on orderly UK exit, Merkel says

German leader Angela Merkel told journalists on Wednesday that the available Brexit options have narrowed after British lawmakers rejected a withdrawal agreement between UK Prime Minster Theresa May and the European Union on Tuesday.?

Merkel said she regretted Tuesday’s outcome of results in London: “We have not given up the goal of an orderly exit (for Britain) but yesterday’s events mean the options have become narrower.”?

She added that she would be able to comment on how things might proceed after the remaining votes in Britain’s parliament over the next two days. “Only after these can we, the EU27, look on a profound basis on how we go forward in the next few days,” Merkel said.

UK economy "remarkably robust," despite Brexit

UK Chancellor Philip Hammond leaves Downing Street for the House of Commons to deliver his spring statement on Wednesday.

UK Chancellor Philip Hammond, the government’s finance minister, has said that while Brexit is causing economic uncertainty, the British economy itself is “remarkably robust.”

Delivering his spring statement to the House of Commons, Hammond cautioned that Tuesday night’s vote leaves a “cloud of uncertainty hanging over our economy” and “our most urgent task in this House is to lift that uncertainty.”

The Chancellor announced that the UK’s GDP growth will remain below 2% over the next five years.

According to the Treasury, the UK economy will grow by 1.2% in 2019, down from a previous forecast of 1.6%. Growth will then rise to 1.4% in 2020. It will then grow by 1.6% a year in 2021, 2022 and 2023.?

Responding to Hammond’s statement, Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell of the opposition Labour Party said: “We have just witnessed a display by the Chancellor of this Government’s toxic mix of callous complacency over austerity and … mishandling of Brexit.”

Happening now: Finance minister gives statement on UK economy amid Brexit turmoil

Prime Minister’s Questions has wrapped, and British Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond is now delivering his spring statement.

Theresa May quips that she does understand the voice of the country, despite losing her own

Theresa May addresses lawmakers during Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday.

Theresa May quipped during Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday that she does understand the voice of the country, despite losing her own.

“I may not have my own voice, but I do understand the voice of the country,” said May, who has been struggling with a hoarse throat.

“People want to leave the EU, they want to end free movement, they want to have our own trade policy, they want to ensure laws are made in this country and judged in our courts. That’s what the deal delivers, that’s what I continue to work to deliver.”

Theresa May has backed herself into a corner, and the wording of her motion proves it

Prime Minister Theresa May leaves Downing Street on Tuesday.

Nothing illustrates the corner that Theresa May is in quite like the wording of today’s motion.?

Theresa May has tried to have her cake and eat it by saying that her preferred option is to carry on trying to get her Brexit deal approved (so NOT supporting a no deal, keeping europhiles happy) while acknowledging that no deal is still the default option and not ruling it out (accepting that no deal COULD still happen, keeping euroskeptics happy).?

The motion looks confusing at first: “That this House declines to approve leaving the European Union without a Withdrawal Agreement and a Framework for the Future Relationship on 29 March 2019; and notes that leaving without a deal remains the default in UK and EU law unless this House and the EU ratify an agreement.”

In plain English, it nearly makes sense. Theresa May and her government still want plan A: for their Brexit deal to be approved by parliament. Right now, they do not want official government policy to be actively pursuing a no-deal Brexit.

However, Theresa May is not taking no deal “off the table” and accepts that without her deal being approved (or Brexit being delayed), no deal is the default option.?

If this sounds confusing it is – and that’s deliberate.

Happening now: Prime Minister's Questions

Prime Minister’s Questions has just begun.

Prime Minister Theresa May says she will vote against a no-deal Brexit

Prime Minister Theresa May has said she will be voting for her motion on a no-deal Brexit.

The carefully worded motion gives the PM some wiggle room, but she is essentially saying that the government’s position is to not actively pursue a no-deal Brexit, while accepting it is not in the gift of the UK to take it off the table.

Speaking at Prime Minister’s Questions, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn asked how she would vote tonight.

“I will be voting for the motion in my name,” May said

Again, here is the full text of the government’s motion:

"Tell me what you want ... what you really really want?"

The working assumption here in Brussels is that British MPs will vote to avoid a no-deal Brexit tonight and move for an extension in the House of Commons on Thursday.?

But as Michel Barnier pointed out in Strasbourg this morning, the only way to avoid a no-deal is to vote for an actual deal. And the only one on the table is the only one the EU will allow, given the red lines narrowly defined by the hardline Brexiteers in Prime Minister Theresa May’s ear.

After two crushing defeats in the House of Commons, that deal looks pretty much dead.?

While I’m told the topic of an extension has yet to be discussed by the EU 27 leaders – any request made by the UK would need to be unanimously signed off at a summit next week – there are growing calls for the UK to define an end game. An extension to do what, precisely?

EU officials often like to quote ’90s British pop sensations The?Spice Girls:?“Tell me what you want … what you really, really want?”

It’s 16 days away from the cliff edge, and there’s still no clear answer on that question from the UK.

The message from the EU, however, is clear, as tweeted by the Chief Brexit Negotiator for Parliament Guy Verhofstadt: “My plea to our British friends put all your energy into finding a cross party majority to find a way out of this mess.”?

"It's not what Irish people want": The view on Brexit from Northern Ireland

It’s business as usual today in Derry – a city on the border with the Republic of Ireland also known as?Londonderry – dodging showers and restocking Guinness.

Men unloading heavy barrels paused to tell us they hadn’t heard the UK government’s proposed border measures in the event of a no-deal Brexit, but doubted London politicians would keep their word.

“It’s not what Irish people want,” another man told us about the slow pace of Brexit and the possibility ultimately of a hard border. Fifty-five percent of people in Northern Ireland voted to remain in the EU during the referendum.

A middle-aged couple told us “the people in England don’t understand Derry,” with little idea about the impact of border controls.

Derry was a flashpoint during The Troubles, a decades-long sectarian conflict over Northern Ireland’s place in the United Kingdom. Since the Good Friday Agreement brought peace to Northern Ireland in 1998, Derry has become a vibrant cultural hub.

“Everyone’s talking about the ‘Derry Girls’ – not Brexit,” a city roadsweeper told us as he cleared empty bottles from around a huge mural depicting the internationally popular TV show.

Britain is "spinning out of control," EU's Brexit coordinator says

Brexiteers have not fulfilled their pledge to “take back control” of Britain, and are instead “spinning out of control,” Guy Verhofstadt, the European Parliament’s Brexit coordinator, said on Twitter Wednesday.

Verhofstadt, who is currently at a European Parliament session in Strasbourg discussing the UK’s exit from the EU, made a plea to Europe’s “British friends” to put their energy into finding a cross-party majority “to find a way out of this mess.”

“There is no solution if both big parties are using this existential issue as a bullet in a weapon against each other. Queen and country needs to come first,” Verhofstadt said.

He added that while he hoped a no-deal Brexit was rejected in parliament on Wednesday, he did not support an extension of the withdrawal process.

Disenfranchised and disillusioned: The view from Scotland

Scotland is a land of Remainers.

Every single council area in the country voted to stay in the European Union back in 2016.

In Edinburgh, the capital city, Remain took a mighty 74% of the vote.

Little wonder then that Edinburgh locals say they feel ignored.

Ian McLaughlan, the chief executive of charity Youth Scotland, says young people here feel disenfranchised and, increasingly, they’re not alone.

Ian McLaughlan, chief executive of Youth Scotland, a network of Youth Groups in Scotland, in the capital Edinburgh.

“Many people in society feel so disengaged from Brexit, so disillusioned,” he said. “Here we are with two weeks to go and we still don’t know what the final outcome is going to be, so there is a real frustration building up in the country.”

There are increasingly calls for a second referendum, an idea that everyone CNN has spoken with in Edinburgh is either open to, or actively calling for.

Rebecca McKay, a student, said a second vote is necessary because no one fully understood what Brexit would mean in the first referendum.

“They should have been more informative to people around here,” she said, adding, “it needs to be a wee bit more in depth next time around.”

Rebecca McKay, a Scottish student, is calling for a second referendum.

Scotland is no stranger to divisive referendums. In 2014 they held their first vote on independence from the UK. Scotland voted to stay in the union by 55%.

The current political quagmire in Westminster, and the fact that Scotland voted overwhelmingly to stay in the EU, means some SNP activists are calling for another vote on independence.

Tuesday’s defeat was seized upon by Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, who said it “demonstrates more clearly than ever that the case for Scotland becoming an independent country has never been stronger.”

Of course any future Scottish independence vote would require the sanctioning of Westminster, and is unlikely to be be called for until after the next Scottish elections in 2021.

The Scots may be happy, in the meantime, with a second Brexit referendum, at the very least.

"Wild West of the UK": Businesses on both sides of Irish border react to government's no-deal plans

Cyclists pass a sign calling for no border to be imposed between Ireland and Northern Ireland outside Newry, Northern Ireland, on November 14, 2018 near the Irish border.

Businesses on both sides of the Irish border have condemned the British government’s proposal to impose no trade tariffs should the United Kingdom leave the European Union without a deal.

In an 11th-hour effort to avert an economic crisis, the UK government has suggested that tariffs would not apply to goods crossing?from EU member the Republic of Ireland into Northern Ireland, which is part of the UK. The proposed measures do not set out a position in respect to tariffs on goods moving from Northern Ireland to Ireland, as that is not within the UK government’s control.

The plans have also sparked concerns around smuggling after it was revealed that no new checks or controls would be introduced at the border.

“To be clear, this does not maintain control of the border, monitor the flow of goods into the UK, and the organized criminals will exploit?this system,” Aodhán Connolly, director of the Northern Ireland Retail Consortium, said. “This will affect Northern Ireland’s reputation as a serious trading area, effectively turning us into the Wild West of the UK.”

The Irish Farmers’ Association has described the UK’s tariff proposals as devastating.

“Our most exposed sectors, particularly beef, simply will not survive the kind of tariffs being talked about,” Joe Healy, IFA president, said. “We export over 50% of our beef to the UK.?If this is subject to tariffs, it will be a ‘direct hit’ of almost €800M on the sector.”

The Meat Industry Ireland (MII) has called UK no-deal tariffs proposals “a massive threat to Irish meat exports” and wants a long extension period before March 29.

“The UK proposals suggest tariffs ranging from approximately €1,500/t on manufacturing beef up to over €2,500/t on steak exports. This level of tariff would severely undermine trade,” according to MII senior director Cormac Healy.

Risk of no deal has never been greater, EU chief Brexit negotiator says

EU's chief Brexit negotiator Michael Barnier speaks during a debate on the UK's withdrawal from the EU in Strasbourg, France.

The EU’s chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier has said the risk of no deal has never been greater, a day after the agreement he helped agree with UK Prime Minister Theresa May was voted down by British lawmakers.

“We are in a very grave moment, because the risk of no deal has never been so elevated, with no deal in a disorderly manner,” Barnier told EU lawmakers in Strasbourg, adding that while it was a scenario the EU had not worked toward, they were ready to face that possibility.

The mood among European lawmakers is a collective folding of arms following Tuesday night’s vote in parliament. And Barnier made clear that Brussels feels it has done all it can and it’s now up to London to sort this mess out.?

“It is up to the UK to find a way out of the stalemate regarding Brexit,” Barnier said, to a round of applause.

“I want to remind a fact. If the UK wants to still leave the EU in a ordered manner, then this treaty that we have negotiated with the UK with Theresa May?government, this treaty is and remains the only available?treaty and I want this to be well understood,” he said, waving papers in the air.

Has the Prime Minister lost control?

As members of Theresa May’s Cabinet shuffled into Downing Street this morning, reporters lobbed questions that focused on a central question: “Has the Prime Minister lost control?”

Responding to calls for her to step down over Tuesday’s crushing defeat of her Brexit deal, a Downing Street source told the UK’s Press Association that May was not preparing for a general election.

“We are not preparing for and we do not want a general election,” the source said. “Our position is unchanged.”

The source added that reports the Conservative campaign headquarters were preparing for the upcoming European elections were “incorrect.”

“We are not preparing candidates because we are not going to participate as a party in European parliamentary elections.”

The key Brexit questions you've wanted to ask, answered

If you’re catching up this morning after the crushing 149-vote defeat of Theresa May’s Brexit withdrawal deal, we’ve got you covered. Here are some key Brexit questions answered:

Is Brexit going away

Nice try! No. Brexit is happening on March 29 unless the UK applies for an extension to Article 50. That vote is probably?going to take place on Thursday. The EU Council meets next week (March 21) that’s likely to be May’s nearest chance to apply for such an extension.?

Could the EU kick the UK out?

Short answer yes, but why would they? If the EU wanted a no-deal crash-out, they only need to wait another 17 days.?

Can the EU laugh and say no, when/if the UK asks for more time?

I doubt they would laugh – eurocrats are not famed for their sense of humor (apart from Donald Tusk) – but with a heavy heart, the leaders of the EU 27 members states could decline the UK’s request for an extension to Article 50. It only takes one member state to veto the extension and many of them have good reason for doing so. The EU has been consistent that if the UK asks for an extension with sensible suggestions as to how they can get out of this trench, it would be carefully considered. But EU diplomats have also made clear for months that they see no point in delaying, only to end up back where we are now.?

Is Theresa May going to resign?

History says no, at least in the immediate future. May has an extraordinary ability to cling on to power. With an EU summit days away and Brexit far from sorted, May is, whatever you think of her, a dedicated public servant. It’s hard to see how she would see it’s in the best interests of the UK to suddenly create uncertainty around the leadership of the country, on top of everything else.?

What about another referendum?

Right now, the clearest path to a second Brexit vote is if the opposition Labour Party puts forward an amendment that a majority of the House of Commons backs. Labour recently adopted a formal policy of backing a second public vote on Brexit, should their alternative plan to May’s be defeated in a Commons vote, which was the case last month. But people hoping to see Brexit canceled should keep the champagne corked for the time being. Labour hasn’t tabled any such amendment to date, and there’s a pretty good reason for that: they don’t think it will pass. The risk of losing that vote is too great to play around with and would both undermine the authority of the opposition and exacerbate divisions within the party. Yes, it’s not just May’s Conservatives that have problems…?

The other reason Remainers should hold off the celebrations is this: it’s unclear whether, even if a second public vote were to be held, Remain would be on the ballot. Jeremy Corbyn, the leader of the Labour Party, has been careful not to endorse the so-called “People’s Vote” campaign and instead always words his second referendum plan as a second public vote.

What about another election?

Now you’re talking. Some think that Labour only backed a second vote because of its ultimate desire to force an early general election?– something the party believes it could win. Labour saw success in the 2017 snap election by having a Schrodinger’s Brexit policy – appearing more europhile than the Conservatives while officially supporting leaving the EU. Formally backing a second referendum has a similar effect, especially if the government continually blocks the possibility of it happening.?

And if you think this sounds far-fetched, Labour aides were on Tuesday celebrating the fact that the Commons Speaker John Bercow didn’t accept any amendments.

Is the threat that Brexit can be lost real?

The sight of May and President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker sitting side-by-side on Monday night, claiming it was this deal or no Brexit, was nothing short of extraordinary. Both know that this isn’t really true. The only way Brexit can be lost is if the UK revokes Article 50. It would need to pass an Act of Parliament to do so, which without a public vote instructing parliament to do so is a total non-starter. It could happen, but it would require first a Brexit delay, then a national vote with a huge majority.?

Here's the timeline for today

Mid-morning: Prime Minister Theresa May is expected to chair a Cabinet meeting on Wednesday morning a day after a stunning 149-vote defeat of her reworked Brexit withdrawal deal.

10:00 a.m.: A?European Parliament session of all members gets underway in Strasbourg focusing on preparations for next week’s European Council meeting on the UK’s withdrawal from the European Union.

12:00 p.m.: May faces questions from MPs in the House of Commons hours before the lawmakers are due to vote on whether to leave the EU without a deal.

12:30 p.m.: May’s finance minister Philip Hammond will deliver the spring statement on the state of the UK’s economy, against a backdrop of Brexit turmoil and mounting fears over the financial fallout of a no-deal exit from the EU.

1 p.m. or later: The House of Commons will begin debating the UK’s withdrawal from the EU.

7 p.m.: MPs start to vote, first on amendments, if any are selected, then on whether to crash out of the EU without a deal.

UK government publishes no-deal plans for trade tariffs and Irish border

The British government has published its plans for trade tariffs and the Irish border in the event of a no-deal Brexit withdrawal from the European Union.

The move comes one day after the crushing defeat of Theresa May’s reworked Brexit deal, and hours before lawmakers reconvene in parliament to vote on whether the UK should crash out of the EU without a deal on March 29 – the scheduled date for departure.

Under the temporary plans, which would last for 12 months, 87% of imports to the UK would be eligible for tariff free access in an effort to avert economic shock.

But tariffs will still apply to some goods, including agriculture, farming and some auto imports.

The government also revealed that tariffs will not be applied to goods crossing from the Republic of Ireland, part of the EU, into Northern Ireland, which remains part of the UK, triggering concerns around smuggling.

The plans did not shed any light on security on the border, but did say that no new checks or controls would be introduced.

Goods from the EU are currently tariff free, as the UK falls within the EU Customs Union. But, in the event of a no-deal Brexit, World Trade Organization tariffs would have been the default position.?

“Because these are unilateral measures, they only mitigate the impacts from exit that are within the UK government’s control. These measures do not set out the position in respect of tariffs or processes to be applied to goods moving from Northern Ireland to Ireland,” the government said in a statement.