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Brexit bill faces delay in House of Lords

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One of British Prime Minister Theresa May's predecessors attacked her Brexit strategy on Monday as a bill to start the EU divorce also hit opposition in the House of Lords.

Former Conservative prime minister John Major said May's government was peddling an "over-optimistic" view of Brexit and said it was "time to stop" the criticism of those who disagreed with her plans.

The outspoken attack came as May prepares to start negotiations on leaving the European Union by the end of March, following the June referendum vote last year to quit the bloc.

Major warned that those who could least afford it would suffer from May's plan to take Britain out of Europe's single market, and said her government was not being honest.

"I have watched with growing concern as the British people have been led to expect a future that seems to be unreal and over-optimistic," Major told the Chatham House think tank.

He also chastised her approach to negotiations with other EU leaders, warning: "A little more charm, and a lot less cheap rhetoric, would do much to protect the UK's interests."

A carnival float depicting British Prime Minister Theresa May pointing a gun to her with the letteri...
A carnival float depicting British Prime Minister Theresa May pointing a gun to her with the lettering "Brexit" takes part in the traditional "Rose Monday" carnival parade in Duesseldorf, western Germany on February 27, 2017
PATRIK STOLLARZ, AFP

May cannot trigger Article 50 of the EU's Lisbon Treaty, starting a two-year countdown to the divorce, without parliamentary approval.

A short bill empowering her to start the negotiations cleared the House of Commons last month, but on Monday members of the unelected upper House of Lords began debating changes that could cause a delay.

The first crunch vote could come on Wednesday on an amendment to guarantee the rights of more than three million Europeans currently living in Britain.

Another is expected next week on enshrining into law the government's promise to give parliament a vote on the final Brexit deal.

Government supporters have warned the chamber risks abolition if it is obstructive, but a Lords source in the opposition Labour party told AFP that May was on course to "lose handsomely".

If peers succeed in amending the legislation, it will have to go back to the Commons for approval, making May's end-of-March deadline very tight.

- 'Do the right thing' -

May's Conservatives have a majority in the House of Commons, but the party has just 252 peers out of around 800 in the House of Lords.

Former minister Michael Heseltine is among the Tory rebels who could join Labour and the pro-European Liberal Democrat party in backing moves to give parliament a final vote.

An advertising van with an anti-Brexit poster drives past the Houses of Parliament in central London...
An advertising van with an anti-Brexit poster drives past the Houses of Parliament in central London on February 27, 2017
Daniel LEAL-OLIVAS, AFP

Heseltine even suggested Britain could reverse its decision if the public mood changes before it leaves the EU.

"My opponents will argue that the people have spoken, the mandate secured and the future cast. My experience stands against this argument," he wrote in the Mail on Sunday.

Article 50 provides for a maximum of two years of negotiations to work out a divorce and the terms of future post-Brexit relations.

May has promised to resolve the issue of EU citizens in Britain as a priority, but will not guarantee their rights until she has secured the rights of Britons living overseas.

Dick Newby, leader of the Liberal Democrats in the Lords, said there was strong support among peers for addressing the question now.

There is "an overwhelming desire to do the right thing and ensure that all EU nationals have the right to remain," he told the Guardian on Sunday.

The prime minister has promised to control EU migration after Brexit, after mass arrivals from mostly eastern Europe featured heavily in the referendum campaign.

But Downing Street played down media reports Monday that the cut-off date for new EU arrivals could come around the time that May triggers Article 50, saying it was an issue for negotiation.

Ministers are also reportedly considering plans to limit benefits for new immigrants and grant five-year visas to migrant workers in key sectors, such as software engineering, health and social welfare, farming and hospitality.

One of British Prime Minister Theresa May’s predecessors attacked her Brexit strategy on Monday as a bill to start the EU divorce also hit opposition in the House of Lords.

Former Conservative prime minister John Major said May’s government was peddling an “over-optimistic” view of Brexit and said it was “time to stop” the criticism of those who disagreed with her plans.

The outspoken attack came as May prepares to start negotiations on leaving the European Union by the end of March, following the June referendum vote last year to quit the bloc.

Major warned that those who could least afford it would suffer from May’s plan to take Britain out of Europe’s single market, and said her government was not being honest.

“I have watched with growing concern as the British people have been led to expect a future that seems to be unreal and over-optimistic,” Major told the Chatham House think tank.

He also chastised her approach to negotiations with other EU leaders, warning: “A little more charm, and a lot less cheap rhetoric, would do much to protect the UK’s interests.”

A carnival float depicting British Prime Minister Theresa May pointing a gun to her with the letteri...

A carnival float depicting British Prime Minister Theresa May pointing a gun to her with the lettering “Brexit” takes part in the traditional “Rose Monday” carnival parade in Duesseldorf, western Germany on February 27, 2017
PATRIK STOLLARZ, AFP

May cannot trigger Article 50 of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty, starting a two-year countdown to the divorce, without parliamentary approval.

A short bill empowering her to start the negotiations cleared the House of Commons last month, but on Monday members of the unelected upper House of Lords began debating changes that could cause a delay.

The first crunch vote could come on Wednesday on an amendment to guarantee the rights of more than three million Europeans currently living in Britain.

Another is expected next week on enshrining into law the government’s promise to give parliament a vote on the final Brexit deal.

Government supporters have warned the chamber risks abolition if it is obstructive, but a Lords source in the opposition Labour party told AFP that May was on course to “lose handsomely”.

If peers succeed in amending the legislation, it will have to go back to the Commons for approval, making May’s end-of-March deadline very tight.

– ‘Do the right thing’ –

May’s Conservatives have a majority in the House of Commons, but the party has just 252 peers out of around 800 in the House of Lords.

Former minister Michael Heseltine is among the Tory rebels who could join Labour and the pro-European Liberal Democrat party in backing moves to give parliament a final vote.

An advertising van with an anti-Brexit poster drives past the Houses of Parliament in central London...

An advertising van with an anti-Brexit poster drives past the Houses of Parliament in central London on February 27, 2017
Daniel LEAL-OLIVAS, AFP

Heseltine even suggested Britain could reverse its decision if the public mood changes before it leaves the EU.

“My opponents will argue that the people have spoken, the mandate secured and the future cast. My experience stands against this argument,” he wrote in the Mail on Sunday.

Article 50 provides for a maximum of two years of negotiations to work out a divorce and the terms of future post-Brexit relations.

May has promised to resolve the issue of EU citizens in Britain as a priority, but will not guarantee their rights until she has secured the rights of Britons living overseas.

Dick Newby, leader of the Liberal Democrats in the Lords, said there was strong support among peers for addressing the question now.

There is “an overwhelming desire to do the right thing and ensure that all EU nationals have the right to remain,” he told the Guardian on Sunday.

The prime minister has promised to control EU migration after Brexit, after mass arrivals from mostly eastern Europe featured heavily in the referendum campaign.

But Downing Street played down media reports Monday that the cut-off date for new EU arrivals could come around the time that May triggers Article 50, saying it was an issue for negotiation.

Ministers are also reportedly considering plans to limit benefits for new immigrants and grant five-year visas to migrant workers in key sectors, such as software engineering, health and social welfare, farming and hospitality.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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