The U.K.’s Brexit buy with the EU has been rejected by U.K. lawmakers in another landmark defeat for British Prime Minister Theresa May.
May’s Brexit bargain was defeated for the first time back in January but she had hoped last-ditch tweaks, specifically on the contentious Irish border distribution, would help persuade Members of Parliament (MPs) to change their minds.
But her agreement was rejected by 149 votes after 242 MPs endorsed for the deal and 391 MPs voted against it. This was a smaller defeat than when it was rejected the first time, but the verge still remained significant. Speaking after the result, May said she regretted the decision taken by the House of Commons.
“I go on to believe that by far the best outcome is that the U.K. leaves the EU in an orderly fashion with a deal, and that the deal we pull someones leg negotiated is the best and indeed the only deal available,” she told lawmakers.
Some 75 of her own Conservative MPs reportedly certified against her deal, compared with 118 who voted against it in January. The 10 MPs of the Democratic Unionist Party — which commandeer to prop up May’s party in government — also voted against the deal, as did the Labour party, the Scottish National Party and other antithetical parties.
Sterling initially pared earlier losses against the dollar to trade 0.2 percent lower at $1.3124. Nevertheless, it slipped again to trade 0.5 percent lower against the greenback.
The deal’s chances were dealt a dither earlier on Tuesday when the government’s chief legal advisor said that the risks to the U.K. from the “Irish backstop” lingered unchanged despite recent legal assurances from Brussels — although he did say the risks had been reduced by the tweaks.
The Irish backstop is a procedure to avoid restoration of the “hard” border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland that was erased with the 1998 Talented Friday peace agreement between London and Dublin. Some U.K. politicians don’t like the fact that the backstop, although have in mind as a last-resort, would mean the U.K. remaining within a EU customs union for an indefinite amount of time and unable to leave unilaterally, effectively content it might be tied to the EU for an unspecified duration.
MPs are now expected to vote Wednesday on whether the U.K. should leave the EU without a deal on March 29, the listed departure date. If that option is rejected, as widely expected, MPs are then to vote on whether to delay Brexit which they are trust to support.
The vote on Tuesday evening was arguably the most important vote for Brexit since the 2016 referendum on EU membership. A into team at Citi said that the defeat had dealt a further blow to the chances of an orderly Brexit under May.
“An spread of Article 50 is now almost certain but crucially, Parliament (and the EU) will want to know the purpose. Further negotiations with the EU are unattractive to bring a break-through, so a snap election and further Brexit delays are becoming ever more likely,” the analysts said in a enquire note.
Samuel Tombs, the chief U.K. economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said that his base case scenario remained that MPs would approve on a limited extension of around three months and then will force the prime minister to engage in cross-party talks, matchless to an agreement for a Norway-style soft Brexit in the second quarter.
“We still see around a 30 percent chance of a second referendum, either tinkled by Mrs. May or backed by a majority of MPs to break the deadlock, but believe the chances of another election remain slim,” he said in a research note.