British PM Theresa May survives vote of confidence

London, United Kingdom – British Prime Minister Theresa May has survived a secret vote of confidence on her leadership of the ruling Conservative Party triggered by rebel MPs disgruntled by her Brexit deal.

Of the Conservatives’ 317 members of parliament, 200 voted in support of May remaining as the ruling party’s leader during the poll on Wednesday evening, while 117 went against her.

The vote was announced earlier on Wednesday after Conservative Party members reached the threshold of 48 demands needed to trigger a confidence ballot on May’s leadership.

Having survived the poll, prior to which she reportedly told her party she would not seek to lead it into Britain’s next general election in 2022, May is now immune from another internal leadership challenge for 12 months.

“Whilst I’m grateful for that support, a significant number of colleagues did cast votes against me. And I’ve listened to what they said,” May said in a televised statement after the ballot.

May added that her government had a “renewed mission to deliver the Brexit people voted for”, one that “brings back control of our money, borders and laws”, during the UK’s 2016 referendum on the country’s decades-long membership of the European Union.

UK public frustration grows over Brexit crisis

“That must start here in Westminster, with politicians on all sides coming together and acting in the national interest,” she said.

‘Changes nothing’

But disgruntled Conservatives and opposition politicians said the result of the vote would not alleviate the chaos gripping May’s government as it seeks to navigate the UK’s departure from the 28-member European Union.

Jacob Rees-Mogg, a hardline pro-Brexit Conservative MP and one of those who demanded a say in May’s party leadership, described the outcome as “terrible” for the prime minister and called on her to resign.

Fellow pro-Brexiteer Conservative Owen Patterson also suggested the ballot produced a “very poor result” for May.

Meanwhile Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the main opposition Labour Party, which has previously threatened to table a no-confidence motion against May, said Wednesday’s vote “changes nothing”.

“Theresa May has lost her majority in parliament, her government is in chaos and she’s unable to deliver a Brexit deal that works for the country and puts jobs and the economy first. She must now bring her botched deal back to parliament next week,” he wrote on Twitter. 

Irish Border issue

The UK is poised to leave the EU on March 29 next year, two years after it triggered Article 50 and kick-started arduous negotiations with European leaders over a divorce deal.

But May is under intense pressure from across the political spectrum over the withdrawal agreement she has brokered with European counterparts, raising fears the UK could crash out of the bloc without a deal on the terms of its departure.

The UK’s central bank has warned that Britain’s gross domestic product could shrink by up to eight percent in such a scenario. The government, for its part, has forecast a potential economic slump of more than nine percent in the wake of a no-deal Brexit.

Earlier this week, the British leader pulled a parliamentary vote on her proposed divorce plan, acknowledging it would have been roundly rejected by the UK’s lower chamber House of Commons. She has promised to reschedule the vote for before January 21.

Analysts said May’s political survival on Wednesday wouldn’t resolve the “fundamental problem” she faces in attempting to get her EU withdrawal plan signed off by MPs.

“This vote won’t change anything with regards to how it will be difficult for her to get her version of Brexit through parliament and if she can’t do that she won’t be able to stay on as prime minister or leader anyway,” Oliver Patel, institute manager and research associate at University College London’s European Institute, said.

“The parliamentary arithmetic is the same: the only thing we know for certain is that most MPs don’t want a no-deal Brexit,” he added.

EU: No renegotiation

On Tuesday, the day the Commons vote on her Brexit deal had been due to take place, May embarked on a whistle-stop tour of several European cities in a bid to win concessions on her divorce plan’s contentious “backstop” clause.

The clause is a safety net provision that guarantees no hard border between Northern Ireland, -a British territory – and the Republic of Ireland – an EU member –  in the event that post-Brexit trade negotiations between the UK and the bloc prove unsuccessful.

It proposes the whole of the UK, including Northern Ireland, remain in a customs union with the EU “unless and until” the bloc agrees there is no prospect of a return to a hard border.

Critics of the proposal argue it could tie the UK into the EU’s orbit indefinitely.

May will now head head to a preplanned EU Council summit in Brussels on Thursday to seek “legal and political reassurances” on the backstop clause to “assuage the concerns that members of parliament have on that issue”.

But European leaders have so far refused to countenance changes to any aspects of the withdrawal agreement, including the backstop clause.

On Thursday, the European Parliament’s governing body issued a statement saying the Brexit deal was “not open to renegotiation”.

“The Withdrawal Agreement and Political Declaration are fair and balanced and represent, given EU principles, current UK red lines and the commitments set out in the Good Friday Agreement, the only deal possible to ensure an orderly withdrawal from the European Union,” the statement said.

Analysts, meanwhile, cautioned that May’s government ought to be careful what it “wishes for” in pushing for revised terms.

“Some EU capitals are not perfectly happy with some aspects of this deal, including the final shape of the backstop,” said Agata Gostynska-Jakubowska, a senior research fellow at the Centre for European Reform.

“Any reopening of negotiations could result in opening Pandora’s Box and EU states saying we don’t like this and that [in the deal].”

“The EU are already close to losing their patience and the clock is still ticking [towards Brexit].”

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