Still No Brexit Deal Despite Plenty of Compromises From UK PM May

March 5, 2019 by Tim Ross

U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May is trying to get her Brexit deal rewritten in Brussels to make it acceptable to Parliament. Since her deal was defeated by a massive 230 votes on Jan 15, May has made a succession of compromises, yet has still not nailed down a text she can sell to the House of Commons.

The biggest problem for many members of Parliament is the so-called backstop plan for the Irish border, which the Attorney General Geoffrey Cox says could trap Britain inside EU trade rules indefinitely. But — unlike the British side — the EU is showing no signs of backing down.

These are the concessions May has made so far:

One official says the U.K. is now hoping to find a way for the U.K. to leave the backstop, if trade talks with the EU on a permanent future relationship irretrievably break down. There’s no mention of a time limit, or an unrestricted right for Britain to leave the backstop when it chooses to do so.

Read more: U.K. Ministers Head to Brussels in Quest for Elusive Brexit Deal

Attached