May presents Plan B for Brex

Expanding the revised plan for Britain's exit from the European Union during its speech in Parliament, Prime Minister Teresa May stressed that the only way to ensure that Britain can avoid the EU exit disaster without agreement is, or the adoption of its agreement negotiated with the EU, or [...]
Opening out the revised plan for Britain's exit from the European Union, during its speech in Parliament, Prime Minister Teresa May stressed that the only way to ensure that Britain can avoid the EU-free exit disaster is, or the adoption of its agreement negotiated with the EU, or revote of “Article 50” of the Lisbon Treaty.
She insisted she was more focused on finding concessions from the EU, which would find support from British MPs, while rejecting calls for a timely delay of “Brexit”.
The chief of the British executive said there was no parliamentary majority for a second referendum. May said that further consultations with Northern Ireland's Democratic Union Party will continue on, on the objective of the mechanism that avoids a classic border between the Republic of Ireland, the state of the European Union, HINA and Northern Ireland, part of Great Britain.
Later, it will present these consultations to the European Union, while it is still not known when it will visit Brussels before next Tuesday, when the second vote of its plan B will take place following its initial plan days earlier, with the largest majority in parliamentary history in Britain.
Meanwhile, the prime minister announced an annulment of 65 pounds for citizens of the European Union in Britain, who will have to register for receiving permanent status stay in Britain after “Brexit”. Those who have paid, meanwhile, this amount for this scheme that began to apply today “will be remanded”, the prime minister said.
Theresa May has a week's deadline until the day of her revised plan to convince her of her own, more than the opposition, for the adoption of the EU's Appeal Agreement, while any idea of her not being caught back in the sand will have to go through the Brussels filters, whose concessions will depend greatly on the success or not of Theresa Mayt in the vote after a week, for the long and uncertain process of <x0Brex <1x>
Axioma “a week is a long time in politics” worth more than ever for the maze of current British politics.











