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May Keeps Fighting as Tories Prepare to Vote on Her Leadership

Published 12/12/2018, 04:49 AM
Updated 12/12/2018, 05:00 AM
&copy Bloomberg. LONDON, ENGLAND - DECEMBER 12: Prime Minister Theresa May makes a statement in Downing Street after it was announced that she will face a vote of no confidence, to take place tonight, on December 12, 2018 in London, England. Sir Graham Brady, the chairman of the 1922 Committee, has received the necessary 48 letters (15% of the parliamentary party) from Conservative MP's that will trigger a vote of no confidence in the Prime Minister. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)

(Bloomberg) -- Follow @Brexit on Twitter, join our Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) group and sign up to our Brexit Bulletin.

Theresa May vowed to fight the leadership challenge against her, warning rebels in her Conservative Party that if they topple her they will be putting Brexit at risk.

Tory members of Parliament will vote on Wednesday evening on whether they have confidence in May. If she loses, a leadership contest is launched.

Follow all the day’s developments as they happen in our rolling live blog

“I will contest that vote with everything I’ve got,” May said outside her Downing Street office. The pound rose as much as 0.5 percent as traders bet she would win.

Theresa May’s Leadership Challenge Vote: A Traders’ Guide

May said a leadership challenge would delay Brexit, or even risk it being canceled altogether. She urged lawmakers to think of the “national interest” and deliver the divorce that people voted for in 2016. “It is now within our grasp,” she said. “Weeks spent tearing ourselves apart will only create more division.”

Cabinet ministers -- including some potential rivals -- and moderate Tories came out in numbers to support May, accusing those trying to oust her of being mad or selfish. At least 15 Cabinet ministers say they back May. Still, the ballot is private so they don’t need to vote as they say they will.

It also threatens to eat into the time available to get a Brexit deal through Parliament before exit day on March 29. If May goes, the agreement she spent 18 months negotiating with Brussels will probably be discarded. It increases the chances of a pro-Brexit Tory taking over and pursuing a more dramatic split from the bloc than the one May was pursuing. If a hardliner takes over, then the risk of a no-deal split -- the scenario most feared by business -- also rises.

A new leader could ask for an extension to the negotiating timetable, but it would require approval from all 27 EU leaders. But a new leader won’t change the parliamentary math -- there’s no clear majority for any kind of Brexit in parliament.

The leadership crisis was triggered after May took the dramatic decision on Monday to postpone a crunch vote in Parliament on whether to approve or reject the deal she struck with the European Union.

Critical Delay

She said at the time that she would have lost that vote and has launched a drive to secure fresh concessions on the terms of the divorce from EU leaders, so far without success.

May won support from potential leadership rivals such as Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt and Pensions Secretary Amber Rudd.

But the party’s euroskeptic European Research Group issued a statement saying May must be ousted -- because her Brexit deal fails to deliver what the country needs.

“Theresa May’s plan would bring down the government if carried forward,” the group’s chairman Jacob Rees-Mogg and deputy chairman Steve Baker said in a statement. “Our party will rightly not tolerate it. Conservatives must now answer whether they wish to draw ever closer to an election under Mrs May’s leadership. In the national interest, she must go.”

© Bloomberg. LONDON, ENGLAND - DECEMBER 12: Prime Minister Theresa May makes a statement in Downing Street after it was announced that she will face a vote of no confidence, to take place tonight, on December 12, 2018 in London, England. Sir Graham Brady, the chairman of the 1922 Committee, has received the necessary 48 letters (15% of the parliamentary party) from Conservative MP's that will trigger a vote of no confidence in the Prime Minister. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images) © Bloomberg. Theresa May, U.K. prime minister, walks back into number 10 Downing Street after delivering a statement in London, U.K., on Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2018.

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