Facing almost certain defeat, British Prime Minister Theresa May on Monday postponed a vote in Parliament on her Brexit deal, saying she would go back to European Union leaders to seek changes to the divorce agreement.
With EU officials adamant the withdrawal deal is not up for renegotiation, May's move threw Britain's Brexit plans into disarray, battered the pound and intensified the country's political crisis.
Two-and-a-half years after Britain voted to leave the EU, and with departure just over three months away on March 29, the country does not know on what terms it will leave and whether May will still be Britain's leader when it does.
In an emergency statement to the House of Commons, May accepted that the divorce deal she struck last month with EU leaders was likely to be rejected "by a significant margin" if the vote were held Tuesday as planned.
May said she would defer the vote so she could seek "assurances" from the EU and bring the deal back to Parliament. She did not set a new date for the vote.
Lawmakers from the opposition and from May's Conservative Party were incredulous. "The government has lost control of events and is in complete disarray," said opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.
Jacob Rees-Mogg, a leading pro-Brexit Conservative, expressed despair. "It's not really governing," he said. "It's just an awful muddle."
She has been battling ever since first to strike a divorce deal with the bloc, then to sell it to skeptical British lawmakers. May insisted the agreement hammered out with the EU after a year and a half of negotiations was "the best deal that is negotiable."
"The deal is the deal," Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said. "It's taken two years to put together. It's a fair deal for both sides."
European Council President Donald Tusk tweeted: "We will not renegotiate the deal, including the backstop, but we are ready to discuss how to facilitate UK ratification."
"This shambles can't go on so how about it?" Sturgeon tweeted at Corbyn. Corbyn stopped short of calling a no-confidence vote Monday, but said if May could not renegotiate with the EU, "then she must make way."
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