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Brexit: Heseltine vows to rebel in Lords bill debate | Brexit: Heseltine vows to rebel in Lords bill debate |
(about 4 hours later) | |
Senior Tory Lord Heseltine has said he will rebel against the government when peers debate the bill giving Theresa May the authority to trigger Brexit. | Senior Tory Lord Heseltine has said he will rebel against the government when peers debate the bill giving Theresa May the authority to trigger Brexit. |
He said he would support an opposition amendment in the House of Lords demanding MPs get a meaningful vote on the deal reached with the EU. | |
Writing in the Mail on Sunday, he denied this would be a "confrontation". | |
But Home Secretary Amber Rudd told ITV's Peston on Sunday programme: "I hope he will reconsider." | |
Last week peers gave an unopposed second reading to the European Union (Notification of Withdrawal) Bill, following a two-day debate involving more than 180 speakers. | |
MPs have already backed the proposed law, authorising Prime Minister Theresa May to inform the EU of the UK's intention to leave. | MPs have already backed the proposed law, authorising Prime Minister Theresa May to inform the EU of the UK's intention to leave. |
Opposition peers want to amend the bill at a later date to guarantee the rights of EU citizens in Britain and the role of Parliament in scrutinising the process. | Opposition peers want to amend the bill at a later date to guarantee the rights of EU citizens in Britain and the role of Parliament in scrutinising the process. |
As the government does not have a majority in the Lords, it is vulnerable to being outvoted if opposition peers - including Labour's 202 and the 102 Lib Dems - join forces. | As the government does not have a majority in the Lords, it is vulnerable to being outvoted if opposition peers - including Labour's 202 and the 102 Lib Dems - join forces. |
Mrs May has said she wants to invoke Article 50 of the 2009 Lisbon Treaty - the formal two-year mechanism by which a member state must leave the EU - by the end of March, and the government has warned the House of Lords not to frustrate the process. | Mrs May has said she wants to invoke Article 50 of the 2009 Lisbon Treaty - the formal two-year mechanism by which a member state must leave the EU - by the end of March, and the government has warned the House of Lords not to frustrate the process. |
Lord Heseltine wrote in the Mail on Sunday: "The fightback starts here. My opponents will argue that the people have spoken, the [Brexit] mandate secured and the future cast. My experience stands against this argument." | |
He also wrote: "This is not a confrontation with the government. It is to ensure the Commons can exercise its authority over the defining issue of our time." | |
'Plenty of opportunity' | |
The former deputy prime minister, whose leadership challenge to Margaret Thatcher helped trigger her exit from Number 10 in 1990, campaigned for Remain in the run-up to the referendum. | The former deputy prime minister, whose leadership challenge to Margaret Thatcher helped trigger her exit from Number 10 in 1990, campaigned for Remain in the run-up to the referendum. |
He has been a long-standing supporter of the EU within the Conservative Party and backed the idea of the UK joining the single currency. | |
Ms Rudd said: "The fact is the House of Commons, which he was such a fantastic member of in his time, did pass it by a big majority | |
"I hope he will reconsider. There'll be plenty of opportunities to debate." | |
And Conservative Party chairman Sir Patrick McLoughlin told BBC One's Andrew Marr Show: "The bill got an overwhelming majority, one of the biggest majorities a bill has got on its third reading in the House of Commons and it's gone to the House of Lords. | |
"The prime minister has said that there will be a vote once the negotiations are concluded. The prime minister won't conclude the negotiations if she thinks she's got a bad deal." |