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03-22-2019, 09:10 AM
BRUSSELS: The European Union looks set to offer to delay Brexit until May 22, so long as MPs approve Theresa May’s withdrawal deal in a House of Commons vote next week.The proposed extension is five weeks short of the June 30 date requested by the Prime Minister, and is timed to ensure the UK is out of the EU before upcoming European Parliament elections.May made the case for a June 30 extension in a 90-minute presentation to leaders of the other 27 member-states in Brussels, before leaving them to discuss their response in her absence.A draft of the summit communique indicates the EU is likely to refuse any extension running beyond the elections of May 23-26 unless the UK takes part.“Given that the UK does not intend to hold elections to the European Parliament, no extension is possible beyond that date,” said the draft.The document also suggests the EU will formally adopt two documents agreed by May with European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker in Strasbourg last week, with the intention of reassuring MPs that the controversial backstop will not be permanent.As she arrived in Brussels for what was slated to be the UK’s final EU summit as a member of the bloc, the Prime Minister said she “sincerely hopes” Britain will be able to leave with a deal.But several leaders warned that if MPs turn down her Withdrawal Agreement for a third time, the UK could be heading for a no-deal Brexit on March 29.French president Emmanuel Macron said only a short “technical” extension was on offer and if MPs reject the agreement “it will guide everybody to a no-deal for sure”.Luxembourg’s prime minister Xavier Bettel said: “At the moment, there are more non-options on the table than options... I sometimes have the feeling that we are in the waiting room, a bit like Waiting for Godot. But Godot never came so I hope this time they will come.”And Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said: “We think a short delay could be useful. We need to wait for a new vote in the British Parliament.” May was coming under intense pressure after a poor reception from some of her own MPs to her Downing Street statement on Wednesday, when she blamed MPs for failing to implement the result of the 2016 EU referendum and told frustrated voters “I am on your side”.The televised message was described as a “low blow” by former minister Sam Gyimah.But Number 10 defended her comments, saying they had been intended as a “message to the public” to explain why she had decided to seek an extension to the Article 50 withdrawal process. And she put the spotlight back on MPs as she arrived in Brussels, saying: “What is important is that Parliament delivers on the result of the referendum and that we deliver Brexit for the British people. I sincerely hope that we can do that with a deal.”She added: “What matters is that we recognise that Brexit is the decision of the British people—we need to deliver on that. We’re nearly three years on from the original vote—it is now the time for Parliament to decide.”http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/com/cwEr/~4/fnK4hPq11sE
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