- Theresa May is under intense pressure to set out a resignation date from colleagues.
- The prime minister could tell Tory MPs this afternoon that she will stand down if they back her Brexit deal.
- Brexiteers and many Remainers believe a different prime minister should lead the next phase of negotiations.
- Cabinet minister Andrea Leadsom refused to back the prime minister staying on if her deal passed in parliament this week.
LONDON Theresa May is under intense pressure
to set out her resignation date today in a last ditch attempt to
persuade Eurosceptic colleagues to back her Brexit deal.
The prime minister will on Wednesday address a
meeting of Conservative MPs as parliament prepares to vote on possible
alternatives to her Brexit deal, with many backbenchers privately
expecting that May could announce a plan for her departure.
She has already said that she will
not lead the party into the next general election but has resisted
repeated requests to spell out when she will leave Downing Street.
A number of Brexiteers opposed to May's deal,
including Jacob Rees-Mogg, have indicated this week they are now likely
to back the prime minister's deal but others, including Boris Johnson,
have indicated they would be more likely to if she set a date for her
departure.
Writing in his Daily Telegraph column, the
former foreign secretary said he needed "to see that the second phase of
the negotiations will be different from the first," which was widely
interpreted as a signal to urge the prime minister to set out her
resignation date.
Andrea Leadsom, the leader of the House of
Commons, also refused to back the prime minister staying on in the event
she secured her deal.
"I am fully supporting the prime minister to
get us out of the EU," the cabinet minister told BBC Radio 4's Today
programme, adding that whether she stayed after "was a matter for her."
Two of Britain's most-read newspapers, the Times and the Sun, have also called on May to stand down in the past week.
May invited key opponents of her deal
including Jacob Rees-Mogg, Iain Duncan-Smith, and Johnson to her
Chequers, the prime minister's country retreat, over the weekend.
According to reports, key figures including Jacob Rees-Mogg told the
prime minister the way to get her deal through was to tell colleagues
when she planned to stand down.
Many MPs are now openly calling for the prime
minister to quit if her deal goes through. George Freeman, May's former
policy adviser, tweeted on Sunday: "Im afraid its all over for the PM.
Shes done her best. But across the country, you can see the anger.
Everyone feels betrayed. Governments gridlocked. Trust in democracy
collapsing. This can't go on. We need a new PM."
The prime minister shelved plans for a third
vote on her Brexit deal on Tuesday but could bring it back to parliament
on Friday. The government is in intensive talks with the Northern Irish
Democratic Unionist Party to back her deal, a move which could bring
significant numbers of Tory MPs on board.
So far nine Tory MPs who voted against the
deal in January have said they will now back it, meaning Theresa May
still needs 66 votes before it commands a majority.
Indicative votes
Those are likely to include the prime
minister's deal; a customs union; a customs union and single market
membership; a Canada-style free trade agreement; the revocation of
Article 50; a referendum; and no deal.
There is no guarantee that there will be a
majority for any of those outcomes. Even MPs backing it say it could
take several goes before there is a majority for one type of withdrawal
plan.
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