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Bad with her, worse without her. It was with this message that conservative MEPs and trade unionists in Northern Ireland – who had opposed Theresa May and canceled their agreement on Brexit – had given the British Prime Minister too much confidence in 'a close vote.
Otherwise, if they beat May again, they would likely swallow Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn as Prime Minister, who, in turn, did not get the job done. Support of his own party. .
Rejected by only 19 votes, the government's mistrust motion distracted Parliament, sometimes masked by the tone of the election campaign. She has not threatened the Prime Minister, but has strengthened her fragile position in managing Brexit.
Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn heads the presidency Labor Party, and the Labor Party, Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, who heads the House of representatives. (Reuters) – Corbyn has accused the prime minister of running a "zombie government". Corbyn, of the BBC, has been accused of running a "zombie government". May criticized the Labor Party leader's record and declared that as Prime Minister he would create a state of calamity in the country. It is in this nightmare that plunge the British, ten weeks after the deadline to leave the European Union.
The Prime Minister has gained momentum, but the country still faces the dilemma of always: breaking up dramatically with the EU or starting by mutual agreement. It is badumed that the withdrawal, scheduled for March 29, will be postponed.
And the debate on a new referendum is gaining ground and no longer seems absurd: 71 MEPs and 13 MEPs have signed a petition calling for a new plebiscite on Brexit.
Corbyn resists supporting this idea. May rejects him vehemently. As noted columnist Roger Cohen of the New York Times, there is no good solution to the current stalemate, but a second referendum is less serious: "Brexit is detrimental to the British interest, no agreement can make it look good, "he said.
May has until next Monday to present a Plan B for his failure and invite party leaders to debate. However, Corbyn warned that she would not participate in any negotiations as long as she would not reject an agreement without a settlement.
The Guardian editorialist, Jonathan Freedland, summed up the paralysis of the British Parliament, unable to frame Europe, but to break free. "It's the spectacle of a lost and drifting island." Without strong leadership, with a division of government and opposition internally, the disaster seems inevitable.
Sandra Cohen – Photo: Art / G1