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Government 'in a mess' over Brexit, says Keir Starmer | Government 'in a mess' over Brexit, says Keir Starmer |
(35 minutes later) | |
Keir Starmer has accused the government of being in a “mess” over Brexit, after David Davis was forced to come to the House of Commons and repeat the government’s pledge that MPs will be given a “meaningful” vote on the final deal. | |
Labour had tabled an urgent question in parliament, after the Brexit secretary sparked a backlash among MPs by appearing to suggest they might not get a vote until after Britain leaves the EU. | |
In a tetchy exchange with Starmer at the despatch box on Thursday, Davis repeated the promise made by his junior minister, David Jones, in February that MPs will be given a vote. “The choice will be meaningful: either to accept that deal, or to move forward without a deal,” he said. | |
“Clearly we cannot say for certain at this stage when this will be agreed. But as Michel Barnier said, he hopes to get a draft deal done by October 2018 and that is our hope as well.” | |
Davis’s department issued a statement clarifying his own remarks on Wednesday afternoon. | Davis’s department issued a statement clarifying his own remarks on Wednesday afternoon. |
Starmer, the shadow Brexit secretary, replied: “What a mess – one thing one day, another thing the next. Today he says the vote will be before the deal is concluded – that’s not good enough”. | |
Asked by the Labour MP Seema Malhotra during a committee hearing on Wednesday morning when he envisaged parliament would be given a vote on the future relationship with the EU, Davis said discussions could go on until the final minute of the final day of negotiations. | Asked by the Labour MP Seema Malhotra during a committee hearing on Wednesday morning when he envisaged parliament would be given a vote on the future relationship with the EU, Davis said discussions could go on until the final minute of the final day of negotiations. |
When Malhotra asked if that could mean a vote coming after the UK formally exits under the article 50 process timeline – which would be 29 March 2019 – he said: “Yes, it could be. It can’t come before we have the deal.” | When Malhotra asked if that could mean a vote coming after the UK formally exits under the article 50 process timeline – which would be 29 March 2019 – he said: “Yes, it could be. It can’t come before we have the deal.” |
The promise of a meaningful vote was one of the key concessions made by the government during the passage of the article 50 bill in February, when it faced the prospect of a defeat over MPs’ insistence they must be given the chance of rejecting the deal. | The promise of a meaningful vote was one of the key concessions made by the government during the passage of the article 50 bill in February, when it faced the prospect of a defeat over MPs’ insistence they must be given the chance of rejecting the deal. |
The spat comes as the government prepares to bring the complex EU withdrawal bill – the flagship bill needed to get British law ready for Brexit – back to the House of Commons next month. Backbenchers have tabled hundreds of amendments. | The spat comes as the government prepares to bring the complex EU withdrawal bill – the flagship bill needed to get British law ready for Brexit – back to the House of Commons next month. Backbenchers have tabled hundreds of amendments. |
Starmer also confirmed that Labour would table an amendment to the bill aimed at ensuring a meaningful vote takes place before Britain leaves - and urged the government to accept it. | |
The former education secretary Nicky Morgan confronted Davis with claims that he believed potential Tory rebels were not serious about backing the amendments tabled to demand a vote on the final deal, insisting they were “deadly serious”. She urged the government to adopt a concession strategy. |