“Time is running out for Remainer MPs who want to prevent a hard Brexit,” said Stephen Bush in the New Statesman.
Hung parliaments provide opportunities for nimble backbenchers, but when Labour’s Chuka Umunna last week put forward an amendment to the Queen’s Speech demanding that the Government guarantee the UK’s place in the EU single market after Brexit, it was rejected. Just 101 MPs voted for it, and “a mere 49 Labour MPs joined the rebellion” after the leadership ordered them to abstain; three shadow ministers, Catherine West, Ruth Cadbury and Andy Slaughter, were sacked for defying the party whip. The result was a “thumping” parliamentary endorsement of the Government’s Brexit strategy
This story is from the The Week 166 edition of The Week Middle East.
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This story is from the The Week 166 edition of The Week Middle East.
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