UK Prime minister Theresa May warned lawmakers that Britain could be faced with a Brexit "cliff edge" if they failed to back her EU repeal bill, as reports suggested momentum was growing within her party to unseat her.
With British lawmakers readying for their first full parliamentary debate on the legislation that will sever the country's ties with the European Union, the minister responsible for overseeing the divorce proceedings admitted on Sunday that some payments would continue to Brussels after Britain left.
May failed to win a clear mandate at a snap election in June and only has a slim majority in parliament that rests on an agreement with a smaller party.
She remains vulnerable if pro-European lawmakers in her Conservative party team up with other parties to vote down legislation or support amendments.
In Thursday's debate, the main opposition Labour Party is planning to propose several changes to the repeal bill with a view to keeping Britain in the single market and customs union during a Brexit transition period after 2019, according to The Times.
On Saturday, May’s deputy advised Conservative lawmakers against doing anything that would increase Labour’s chances of returning to power, while May said the bill was the best way to ensure a successful Brexit.
“(It is) the single most important step we can take to prevent a cliff-edge for people and businesses, because it transfers laws and provides legal continuity,” she said in comments provided by her office.
But in a move that would irk many Eurosceptics, the Sunday Times said May was preparing to pay a Brexit divorce bill of up to £50 billion to the EU.
A spokeswoman at May’s office told Reuters the report, which cited an unnamed source “is simply not true”.
Leadership challenge?
Britain's chief Brexit negotiator, David Davis, also dismissed the 50 billion figure.
He did say Britain was likely to end up paying money into the EU budget after Brexit for access to cross-border schemes like space and nuclear research, though the sum would not be large over the medium to long-term.
Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney told Newstalk that exit bill was not a fine for leaving the EU, but is actually "financial commitments that Britain has already committed to".
He said it was “a perfectly reasonable request by the European Union but it’s a difficult thing politically for a British government to accept that they need to contribute billions of Euros to a Union that they’re leaving”.
Speaking to the BBC on Sunday, David criticised the EU Commission for trying to paint the talks in a negative light after last week’s third negotiating round ended with sharp criticism of the British approach.
“The commission puts itself in a silly position if it says nothing has been done,” he said, adding that Britain would not be forced by time pressure to act against its interests.
May tried last week to douse speculation over her leadership by saying she wanted to continue as prime minister beyond the next parliamentary election, not due until 2022, dismissing expectations she would quit as early as 2019.
But the Sunday Times said “two or three more” Conservative lawmakers have since signed up to a letter calling on her to quit, bringing the total to about 25.
At least 48 are needed to trigger a leadership contest. A spokeswoman at May’s office declined to comment.
The Observer newspaper cited unnamed parliamentarians, including former ministers, as saying there was growing anger among pro-European Conservatives after they were told that softening the repeal bill would be seen as backing Labour, making a leadership challenge more likely this autumn.
May was trying to expand her supporter base by winning over younger people who backed Labour in the June election with plans to reform tuition fees and provide cheap homes to public sector workers, the Sunday Times also said.
Reuters