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UK: Theresa May Makes Case for Brexit Deal

The top minister was talking after EU leaders met for a special summit in Brussels and officially encouraged Theresa May’s Brexit deal, following a dialogue lasting less than an hour. Jean-Claude Juncker, the president of the European Union, stated Sunday was a “sad day”. Theresa May has expressed that she is not sad that Britain is leaving the EU, as she made an instantaneous appeal to the general public pronouncing: “the British peoples don’t need to spend any time arguing about Brexit.”
However asked if she shared the sentiment, Theresa May also stated, “no: however I realize that others do; I recognize that a few European leaders are unhappy at this second.”Despite the increasing number of bleak potentialities for her deal passing the house of Commons next month, in what she knew as “one of the maximum extensive votes for decades”, may additionally struck a defiant observe.
She stated she had constantly rejected the “suggest of depression” from folks that believed a useful Brexit settlement couldn’t be struck. She also drew the authorities’ enthusiasm to move directly to domestic priorities – a view she believes is shared through many citizens. “The British people don’t want to spend any greater time arguing approximately Brexit,” she stated. The outlines of that campaign have been sparkling as she described the deserves of the deal on Sunday, highlighting a cease to unfastened movement “once and for all”, halting “tremendous annual bills” to the EU, and finishing the jurisdiction of the EU court docket of justice as the benefits of her deal. May also pointedly highlighted the £394m every week her government has promised to pour into the NHS. that pledge, which the top minister has formerly claimed is the result of a “Brexit dividend”, echoes the £350m every week the vote leave campaign claimed may be diverted to the fitness service if Britain left the EU. In an open letter on Sunday, May promised to put her “heart and soul” into winning over MPs and voters to the merits of her deal, which she previously said she believed “with every fibre of my being” was the right one.
At Sunday’s press conference, she again refused to rule out resigning if the deal was rejected by parliament next month, saying: “It’s not about me.”The foreign secretary, Jeremy Hunt, conceded on Sunday that the odds of the deal passing were “looking challenging” and refused to rule out the risk that the government could collapse if parliament rejected it. May echoed the insistence by several EU leaders on Sunday that there was no possibility of reopening negotiations if parliament said no.
> Alma Siddiqua

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