British PM bids to win over the public in Brexit deal battle

British PM bids to win over the public in Brexit deal battle


British Prime Minister Theresa May faced the public on Friday to defend her Brexit deal as she battles to salvage the agreement and her own political future.

Teresa May Profile
AFP

May made a rare outing on a radio phone-in during which she faced a call to step down after a tumultuous Thursday in which ministers resigned and members of her own party plotted to oust her.


"I truly believe this is the best deal for Britain," May said of the proposed EU withdrawal agreement, adding that she was "very sorry" that ministers including Brexit secretary Dominic Raab had quit.


All eyes were on Environment Secretary Michael Gove, the highest-profile pro-Brexit campaigner left standing in May's cabinet, to see whether he would follow others out the door.


But a source close to Gove, a Vote Leave figurehead in the 2016 referendum on Britain's European Union membership, said the minister would remain in his post "to ensure the best outcome for the country".


Many media outlets reported that Gove had been offered the position of Brexit secretary.


May told LBC radio she had a "very good conversation" with Gove and would be appointing a new Brexit chief "over the next day or so".


"I don't want to see any of my cabinet colleagues who've been doing a good job in the cabinet feeling the need to resign," she added.


- 'Stand down' -

One caller, a local councillor in her centre-right Conservative Party, urged May to "do the right thing in the national interest and stand down".


She also faced comparisons with prime minister Neville Chamberlain and his 1938 appeasement of Nazi Germany's dictator Adolf Hitler.


"We are not going to be locked in forever to something that we don't want," May insisted.


Brexiteer MPs fear the deal would keep Britain shackled to the Brussels, while EU supporters say it would leave the UK on worse terms than it has inside the bloc and are calling for a second Brexit referendum to break the logjam.


May could yet face a vote of no confidence from her own MPs.


Conservative lawmaker Jacob Rees-Mogg, the high-profile leader of the Brexit hardline European Research Group, submitted a letter of no-confidence on Thursday.


At least 48 letters from Conservative MPs are required to trigger a vote of no confidence in the party leader. But a majority of the party's 315 lawmakers would have to vote against May in order for her to be ousted -- and if she wins, she cannot be challenged for 12 months.

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