Brexit news latest: Theresa May to tell MPs EU exit plan is ‘95 per cent’ done

Theresa May speaks during a media conference at an EU summit in Brussels
AP
Olivia Tobin22 October 2018
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Brexit plans are “95 per cent done”, Theresa May will tell MPs.

After a weekend of attacks within her own ranks against the Prime Minister’s Brexit plan, Mrs May will insist the deal is nearly complete as she faces MPs.

The anticipated talks in the Commons will come after Mrs May has had talks with EU leaders in Brussels.

She will tell MPs that since last month's fractious summit in Salzburg, "important progress" has been made on issues like security, transport and services.

Protocols have been developed on how Brexit will impact Gibraltar and the UK's military base in Cyprus.

Mrs May will tell MPs "important progress" has been made
AFP/Getty Images

"And all of this from the last three weeks alone, is in addition to the agreements we had already reached," she will say.

Mrs May will tell the Commons that "taking all of this together, 95% of the withdrawal agreement and its protocols are now settled".

But she will add: "As I set out last week, the original backstop proposal from the EU was one we could not accept, as it would mean creating a customs border down the Irish Sea and breaking up the integrity of the UK.

"I do not believe that any UK prime minister could ever accept this. And I certainly will not."

European Council President Donald Tusk and Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May talk
REUTERS

Furious backbenchers warned the Prime Minister she is "drinking in the last chance saloon" after tensions flared over her negotiating strategy following a Brussels summit.

Senior Brexiteer Theresa Villiers criticised "disturbing" anonymous briefings to Sunday newspapers, including claims the PM was entering the "killing zone".

But Brexit minister Suella Braverman said her colleagues were "free to express themselves in the way they wish" and repeatedly refused to say she would back Mrs May in a confidence vote.

Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab said the exit agreement must be finalised by the end of next month to allow new laws to be put in place in time for exit day.

Dominic Raab appears on the BBC's Andrew Marr Show
REUTERS

He said “the end” was in sight and the deal was still possible, with a bit of “goodwill and oomph” on both sides.

Mr Raab suggested a transition extension could run for three months, but said the move would have to "solve" the Irish backstop issue.

Labour has warned Mrs May that it will not back her Brexit blueprint when it reaches the Commons.

Shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer said there is a "real lack of confidence" that Mrs May can bring back "anything by way of a good deal".

People's Vote protesters march on Parliament Square - in Pictures

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Additional reporting by Press Association

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