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British Prime Minister Theresa faces revolt over Brexit deal

British Prime Minister Theresa facing leadership challenge as she vowed to push ahead with plans to strike a Brexit deal, promising to “see this through’’ and she is insisting she’s not going anywhere as she stares down the barrel of a no-confidence vote.
Asking her gathering to join behind the recommendations of the draft separate from arrangement, the Prime Minister battled on, in spite of the renunciation of no less than eight clergymen for the duration of the day, and the persuasive Tory backbencher Jacob Rees-Mogg moving to expedite a vote of no-certainty against her.
Influential Brexit-supporting Conservative MP Jacob Rees-Mogg was reported to be preparing a letter expressing no confidence in May.
After the five-hours meeting with the ministers, she said, “May gave a warning to those who might oppose her, hinting that scrapping Brexit entirely was still an option” and added “The choice before us is clear: this deal which delivers on the vote of the referendum … or leave with no deal or no Brexit at all.”
Suella Braverman at the Brexit department and Shailesh Vara at Northern Ireland , Two more junior ministers also quit.
“Has turned out to be worse than anticipated and fails to meet the promises given to the nation by the Prime Minister, either on her own account or on behalf of us all in the Conservative Party manifesto,” Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the backbench said in a letter.
The Brexit arrangements are “a matter of the most noteworthy result,” she stated, contacting “pretty much every territory of our national life.”
She could pull back the current arrangement and approach the EU for an expansion of transactions, yet that would almost certainly be lethal for the officially beset leader. Additionally the slim chance that Britain holds the second choice on Brexit, in which case it may need to experience this once more.
> Puza Sarker Snigdha

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