British Labour Leader Corbyn Curves Toward New EU Referendum Option

LONDON (Reuters) —
Britain’s Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn. (AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert)

British opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn moved a step closer to paving the way for another referendum on European Union membership by trying to use Parliament to grab control of Brexit from Prime Minister Theresa May.

With the clock ticking down to March 29, the date set in law for Brexit, the United Kingdom is in the deepest political crisis in half a century as it grapples with how, or even whether, to exit the European project it joined in 1973.

After May’s Brexit divorce deal was rejected by lawmakers 432-202 last week, the biggest defeat in modern British history, some lawmakers are trying to take control of Brexit from May’s weakened minority government.

Labour put forward an amendment seeking to force the government to give Parliament time to consider and vote on options to prevent a ‘no-deal’ exit – a course May has repeatedly refused to rule out.

Among the options, Labour said, should be a permanent customs union with the EU and “a public vote on a deal” – both proposals that May has ruled out.

“It is time for Labour’s alternative plan to take center stage, while keeping all options on the table, including the option of a public vote,” Corbyn said.

“Our amendment will allow MPs to vote on options to end this Brexit deadlock and prevent the chaos of a no deal.”

However, Labour’s business spokeswoman Rebecca Long-Bailey said the amendment did not mean that the party supported a second vote and merely reflected its existing policy.

“If it was passed, the amendment, and it went to a vote on these specific issues then that would be a decision for the party to take at the time,” she told BBC radio.

As the British Parliament, which traces its roots through a 1,000 years of history, tries to avoid what most lawmakers think would be a disorderly Brexit without an approved deal, there is still no clear majority for an alternative option.

Lawmakers will debate and vote on the next steps on Jan. 29.

May on Monday proposed tweaking her deal, a bid to win over rebel Conservative lawmakers and the Northern Irish party which props up her government, but Labour said May was in denial about the crushing defeat of her plans.

She said another referendum would strengthen the hand of those seeking to break up the United Kingdom and could damage social cohesion by undermining faith in democracy.

Ever since the U.K. voted by 52-48 percent to leave the EU in June 2016, British politicians have failed to find agreement on how or even whether to leave the EU.

Without an approved deal or an alternative, the world’s fifth-largest economy will move to basic World Trade Organization rules on March 29 — a nightmare scenario for manufacturers dependent on delicate supply chains that stretch across Europe and beyond.

Company chiefs are shocked at the political crisis and say it has already damaged Britain’s reputation as Europe’s preeminent destination for foreign investment.

Brexit is the most stupid economic decision for a long time, the worst thing that can happen,” Kasper Rorsted, boss of German sportswear firm Adidas, told the Suddeutsche Zeitung in an interview.

Asked if Brexit could be averted, he said: “I think the train has already left the station. Emotionally, I hope that all parties can come to their senses.”

Supporters of Brexit say that, while there may be some short-term disruption, the warnings of chaos are overblown and that in the long term, the United Kingdom will thrive if it cuts loose from what they cast as a doomed, German-dominated experiment in European unity.

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