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Brexit bill: Ministers expect MPs to reject changes | Brexit bill: Ministers expect MPs to reject changes |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Ministers believe MPs will reject the two changes made to the Brexit bill in the House of Lords when they debate it for the second time later. | Ministers believe MPs will reject the two changes made to the Brexit bill in the House of Lords when they debate it for the second time later. |
Peers want to guarantee the rights of EU citizens in the UK and ensure Parliament has a vote on any deal. | Peers want to guarantee the rights of EU citizens in the UK and ensure Parliament has a vote on any deal. |
The EU Withdrawal Bill could complete its final stages if both Houses of Parliament agree the text of the bill. | The EU Withdrawal Bill could complete its final stages if both Houses of Parliament agree the text of the bill. |
PM Theresa May could then trigger Article 50, which formally starts the Brexit process, as early as Tuesday. | PM Theresa May could then trigger Article 50, which formally starts the Brexit process, as early as Tuesday. |
Both the House of Commons and House of Lords will debate and vote on the bill on Monday. MPs will go first, and if they reverse the Lords changes it will be passed back to peers to decide whether they want to go against the government's plans again. | |
The bill travels back and forth between the two chambers until both sides agree - Parliament could sit through the night to try to reach an agreement, and time has also been set aside on Tuesday and Wednesday. | |
Once it is agreed, the bill will go for Royal Assent, after which Mrs May can formally tell the rest of the EU that she is ready to start negotiating. | Once it is agreed, the bill will go for Royal Assent, after which Mrs May can formally tell the rest of the EU that she is ready to start negotiating. |
BBC chief political correspondent Vicki Young said she thought it likely that MPs would overturn the Lords' amendments to the bill, and did not expect peers to try to block the bill any further. | |
This could mean it was all "done and dusted by midnight" on Monday, she said. | |
Labour has urged the prime minister to consider keeping the "really important" Lords amendments, saying that EU citizens in the UK had been "left in limbo", waiting to hear if they would have the right to stay. | |
Leader Jeremy Corbyn told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "The issue of the rights of EU nationals to remain here is a decent human one and part of our economic success or not - because if we lost those working in the NHS, then we damage our own health service, we damage our own economy." | |
In an interview on BBC One's Andrew Marr Show on Sunday, Brexit Secretary David Davis insisted the UK would be prepared if it has to leave the EU at the end of the two-year negotiating process with no deal in place with the other 27 nations. | In an interview on BBC One's Andrew Marr Show on Sunday, Brexit Secretary David Davis insisted the UK would be prepared if it has to leave the EU at the end of the two-year negotiating process with no deal in place with the other 27 nations. |
He appealed to MPs not to "tie the prime minister's hands" over Parliament getting a final vote on the deal and on EU citizens' rights in the UK. | He appealed to MPs not to "tie the prime minister's hands" over Parliament getting a final vote on the deal and on EU citizens' rights in the UK. |
Mrs May has said Parliament will get a vote, but some MPs and peers want a stronger commitment to give them a more "meaningful" say - and to be able to potentially send her back to the negotiating table in Brussels. | Mrs May has said Parliament will get a vote, but some MPs and peers want a stronger commitment to give them a more "meaningful" say - and to be able to potentially send her back to the negotiating table in Brussels. |
Conservative MP Nicky Morgan, a Remain campaigner, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme seeking such an assurance was not about blocking Brexit. | |
"David Davis and everybody else know that Parliament will find a way to have a vote. Isn't it better that the government acknowledges that today...?" she said. | "David Davis and everybody else know that Parliament will find a way to have a vote. Isn't it better that the government acknowledges that today...?" she said. |
Ms Morgan added: "If the prime minister wants a united party behind her this is a simple reassurance that can be given by ministers at the despatch box that will have the effect of me and my colleagues supporting the government on this." | Ms Morgan added: "If the prime minister wants a united party behind her this is a simple reassurance that can be given by ministers at the despatch box that will have the effect of me and my colleagues supporting the government on this." |
Analysis By Vicki Young, BBC chief political correspondent | |
Conservative MPs are looking for further verbal guarantees from ministers over the exact nature of the parliamentary vote they've been promised on any Brexit deal Theresa May negotiates. | |
Labour is telling its MPs to vote against the government and around 10 Tory backbenchers have defied orders from their party managers in previous votes on this bill, but a rebellion on that scale won't be enough to defeat the government and ministers aren't expected to make concessions. | |
All eyes will then move to the Lords where the Liberal Democrats have promised to keep the pressure on the government - but Labour peers seem more likely to back down, so by tonight the rebellion could have melted away. | |
Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson told ITV's Peston on Sunday that "no deal" would be "perfectly OK", and the consequences were not "as apocalyptic as some people like to pretend". | Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson told ITV's Peston on Sunday that "no deal" would be "perfectly OK", and the consequences were not "as apocalyptic as some people like to pretend". |
But Conservative former deputy PM Lord Heseltine, who was sacked as an adviser last week after rebelling, dismissed his comments as "rubbish", saying many Conservatives felt "betrayed". | But Conservative former deputy PM Lord Heseltine, who was sacked as an adviser last week after rebelling, dismissed his comments as "rubbish", saying many Conservatives felt "betrayed". |
Mrs May has said she would rather take the UK out of the EU with no deal rather than a "bad deal". | Mrs May has said she would rather take the UK out of the EU with no deal rather than a "bad deal". |
No deal would result in trade rules defaulting to World Trade Organisation standards, meaning the UK and EU would be obliged to apply to each other the tariffs and other trade restrictions they apply to the rest of the world. | No deal would result in trade rules defaulting to World Trade Organisation standards, meaning the UK and EU would be obliged to apply to each other the tariffs and other trade restrictions they apply to the rest of the world. |