Brexit Update: What Just Happened And What's Next?

 | Jan 16, 2019 07:22

by Pauline Thomash2 What Just Happened?/h2

It was widely expected that the UK parliament would vote down Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit withdrawal deal, however the majority of 230 votes marks an historic loss for a prime minister.

Directly after the vote, opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn announced a no confidence vote in the government. A successful no confidence motion would lead to a snap general election, causing the pound to fall as a result of market uncertainty.

The no confidence vote will be tabled in parliament later today however it is not expected to pass as it appears to not have enough support. A second no confidence vote cannot be held against the Prime Minister by her own party following December's unsuccessful no confidence vote.

Following this defeat, here are the options available to the UK with only 72 days left before the Brexit deadline on March 29.

h3 Plan B
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Theresa May has until Monday January 21 to return to parliament with a ‘Plan B’ version of her Brexit deal. Given that it took 18 months for her team to negotiate the deal in its current form, it is unlikely that she will be able to cobble together agreement for an entirely different deal in the coming days. Particularly one that will appease the 200+ that voted against Plan A on Tuesday.

In its current form, Plan B is not likely to pass. We do not expect that it is wholly different from the rejected deal and believe the EU will not budge on its position.

h3 Plan B-2/h3

One option could be cross-party support to table amendments to the current deal. In her speech following the vote, May calmed (some) market fears by stating it was not her intention to ‘run down the clock’ to the exit date. She would, in fact, seek cross-party support to work together on securing a deal to bring to the EU.

We'll see in the coming days whether parliament looks likely to find a workable solution and achieve an orderly Brexit ahead of the official exit date.