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May calls emergency cabinet meeting to sign off Brexit deal May calls emergency cabinet meeting to sign off Brexit deal
(34 minutes later)
Ministers have been summoned to an emergency cabinet meeting on Wednesday where they will be asked to sign off Theresa May’s final Brexit deal with Brussels. Ministers have been summoned to an emergency cabinet meeting on Wednesday afternoon, where they will be asked to sign off Theresa May’s final Brexit deal with Brussels.
The critical meeting will review the final text of the withdrawal agreement, which was reached on Tuesday by British and European Union negotiators as the first step in the long process of ratifying the UK’s withdrawal from the EU.The critical meeting will review the final text of the withdrawal agreement, which was reached on Tuesday by British and European Union negotiators as the first step in the long process of ratifying the UK’s withdrawal from the EU.
Ministers were being summoned to No 10 on Tuesday afternoon, for May to brief them on the latest developments before the cabinet meeting. Ministers were being summoned to No 10 individually for briefings on the latest developments from the early evening. One source said they would be allowed to see the key papers on Tuesday evening but not take them home.
“Cabinet will meet at 2pm tomorrow to consider the draft agreement the negotiating teams have reached in Brussels, and to decide on next steps,” a No 10 spokesman confirmed. “Cabinet ministers have been invited to read documentation ahead of that meeting.”
The principal document, the withdrawal agreement, runs to more than 400 pages of dense legal text. Ministers will be given an opportunity to read the documents before the meeting, and will be scrutinising them carefully to see when and how the Irish border backstop can be terminated and what is contained within its provisions.The principal document, the withdrawal agreement, runs to more than 400 pages of dense legal text. Ministers will be given an opportunity to read the documents before the meeting, and will be scrutinising them carefully to see when and how the Irish border backstop can be terminated and what is contained within its provisions.
Brexiters in the cabinet have repeatedly raised concerns that the UK must not sign up to a backstop arrangement that traps the country in a permanent customs union. They will also want to see if the agreement contains any role for the European court of justice in resolving disputes, such as over the termination of the arrangement. Brexiters in the cabinet have repeatedly raised concerns that the UK must not sign up to a backstop arrangement that traps the country in a permanent customs union. They will also want to see if the agreement contains any role for the European court of justice in resolving disputes, such as over the termination of the backstop.
An EU source confirmed that a “stable text” had been sent to London, but officials were not calling it a deal, saying full agreement at political level was still needed. “It is now about seeing if this sticks,” said the source.An EU source confirmed that a “stable text” had been sent to London, but officials were not calling it a deal, saying full agreement at political level was still needed. “It is now about seeing if this sticks,” said the source.
The meeting will begin a ratification process that will require the deal to be signed off at a European council summit most likely in November and by UK MPs in a meaningful final vote that will take place in the middle of December. If the cabinet agrees the plan on Wednesday, the EU expects to hold a special Brexit summit on 25 November, with EU affairs ministers likely to prepare the ground at an extraordinary meeting on 19 November.
Parliament will then ratify the deal in a keenly anticipated “meaningful final vote” that will take place in the middle of December. One Westminster source suggested that could happen on 10 December, following at least two days of debate.
Those hoping to hold a second referendum are expected to use that moment to try to win over a majority in the Commons to the idea.
“I hope that finally we have something. I think it’s pretty close now,” a senior EU source said, drawing a distinction between a failed attempt to find a deal last month that ended when the Brexit secretary, Dominic Raab, met the EU chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, in Brussels. “Last time Dominic Raab said no, but now [Theresa May] puts her weight behind it, so I think she is convinced that she has agreed a good deal.”
The summit would be preceded by an intense round of meetings and exchanges on the text between Brussels and other EU capitals at all levels of European diplomacy. EU member states, led by France and Germany, have told the EU’s chief negotiator they will not be bounced into a deal that risks undermining their long-term economic interests.
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Foreign policyForeign policy
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