May names Brexit secretary amid cabinet departures, no-confidence vote rumours - Action News
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May names Brexit secretary amid cabinet departures, no-confidence vote rumours

British Prime Minister Theresa May has won the backing of the most prominent Brexiteer in her government as she fights to save her draft European Union divorce deal, appointed a new Brexit secretary and battled to stave off a leadership challenge.

U.K. PM will oversee final days of negotiations with EU, spokesperson says

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May faces unravelling support within her own party after unveiling her government's draft Brexit agreement with the European Union on Thursday. (Matt Dunham/Reuters)

British Prime Minister Theresa May won the backing of the most prominent Brexiteer in her government on Friday as she fought to save herdraft European Union divorce deal,appointed a newBrexitsecretaryand battled to stave off a leadership challenge.

More than two years after the United Kingdom voted to leavethe EU, it is still unclear how, on what terms or even if itwill leave as planned on March 29.

Just hours after announcing that her senior ministers had collectively backed her draftdeal, May's premiership was thrust into its most perilous crisis to date when her Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab resigned on Thursday in opposition to it.

Other mutinous lawmakers in her Conservative Party have openly spoken ofousting her and said bluntly that the Brexit deal would not pass Parliament.

But May, who has developed a reputation for weathering crises and has defiantly vowed to stay on as prime minister, got a rare boost on Friday when Michael Gove saidhe would stay on as environment minister.

Asked if he had confidence in May, Gove,who is famous forsinking former foreign minister Boris Johnson's leadership bidin 2016,told reporters: "I absolutely do."

Britain's Environment Minister, Michael Gove, decided Friday not to follow two other cabinet ministers who resigned over May's Brexit deal with the European Union. (Henry Nicholls/Reuters)

"I think it's absolutely vital that we focus on getting the right deal in the future, and making sure that in the areas that matter so much to the British people, we can get a good outcome," said Gove, 51, a potential successor to May.

Stephen Barclay, a little-known junior health minister, was appointed as the newBrexitsecretary, although the status of the role was downgraded from chief negotiator, with May to leadthe completion of talks with the EU.

"He will be doing the domestic role. The PM will be completing the last 10 days of negotiations," May's spokesperson said.

Trade Minister Liam Fox, another leadingBrexitsupporter, also joinedGovein backing May but her future remains uncertain.

Leadership challenge imminent?

By seeking to preserve the closest possible ties with theEU, May has upset her party's many advocates of a clean break,and Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), whichprops up her minority government.

The Daily Telegraph newspaper reported that theDUPhaddemanded May be replaced as prime minister.

"They've raised some questions with us, they've raised someconcerns with us, and yes, we are looking at those," May said. "We are still working with theDUP."

Politicians, officials and diplomats in London openlyquestioned how much time May had left as speculation swirled that a leadership challenge could come soon.

Conservative MP Steve Baker, a prominent euroskeptic, said Friday that rebels in May's party were close to the threshold that would trigger a confidence vote.

If 48 Conservatives submit letters to the so-called 1922 committee, composedof the party's backbench MPs, May would face a vote, requiring a simple majority of the total votes in order to win.

"What's happened is people have been ringing me and telling me that they are putting their letters in ... and I think we're probably not far off," said Baker, a key figure in the Brexit-backing wing of May's party.

"I think it probably is imminent, yes," he told BBC TV.

Stephen Barclay, a little-known junior health minister, has been appointed as May's new Brexit secretary, although the prime minister will now act as the U.K.'s chief negotiator during the final days of talks with EU leaders. (Kirsty Wigglesworth/Associated Press)

British bookmakers William Hill said Friday it had reopened betting on the year May will leave office after briefly suspending bets whenspeculation about a confidence vote emerged.

Raab is the bookmakers' favourite to replace May as the leader of the Conservative Party, ahead of Johnson, the former foreign minister and the figurehead of Britain's Brexit campaign.

Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn was favoured as the next prime minister, but this was due to the lack of certainty over May's position as leader of her party, said William Hill's Joe Crilly.

Betting odds for a second vote on Britain's exit from the EU also saw a massive swing as uncertainty looms over whether May's deal would make through Parliament.

The British pound, which has see-sawed on Brexit news since thereferendum, was flat at $1.2837US on Friday, down almost threecents since a deal was struck on Tuesday.

EU to discuss deal Nov. 25

Many fear Brexit will divide the West as it grapples withboth the unconventional U.S. presidency of Donald Trump andgrowing assertiveness from Russia and China.

Jo Johnson, who resigned as a minister last week, said the situation marked the worst failure of British statesmanship since the 1956 Suez Canal crisis, when Britain was forced by the United States to withdraw its troops from Egypt.

Amid the political turmoil, the ultimate outcome remainsuncertain. Scenarios include May's deal ultimately winning approval,May losing her job,Britain leaving the bloc with no agreement,or even another referendum.

To leave the EU on the terms of her deal, May would need toget the backing of about 320 of parliament's 650 lawmakers. Thedeal is due to be discussed at an EU summit on Nov. 25.

British MP Jacob Rees-Mogg, who is among the most prominent Brexiteers in May's party, was one of several Conservative lawmakers to call for a vote of no confidence on the prime minister's leadership on Thursday. (Peter Nicholls/Reuters)

The EU and Britain need an agreement to keep trade flowingbetween the world's biggest trading bloc and the United Kingdom,home to the biggest international financial centre.

Proponents of closer relations with the EU in her own party and the Labour opposition say the deal squanders the advantages of membership for little gain.

Supporters of Brexit say that while the divorce might bringsome short-term instability, in the longer term it will allowthe United Kingdom to thrive and also enable deeper EUintegration without such a powerful reluctant member.