May calls for an end to "dehumanizing and pejorative" comments in the Brexit column
BelfastTelegraph.co.uk
Theresa May has criticized anonymous MPs who used violent images to describe a possible coup for the dislodge. [19659002] https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/republic-of-ireland/may-calls-for-end-to-dehumanizing-and-derogatory-comments-in-brexit-row-37445019.html [19659002] https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/incoming/article37445016.ece/9baae/AUTOCROP/h342/bpanews_b3925ea7-e3e8-4949-a9dc-3f7f87ebb8e0_1
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Thérèse may have lost an eye violent images to describe a possible blow to overthrow it.
Weekend newspapers reported that conservative backbenchers had said that the prime minister would be "stabbed" and that she should "bring her own knot" to a meeting with MPs to discuss his plans for Brexit.
The official spokesperson for the Prime Minister said that Ms. May was waiting for her. in public life to avoid "dehumanizing" and "derogatory"
"I do not intend to give an answer to these specific anonymous comments," said the spokesman at a regular media briefing in Westminster.
Personal Vitriol has no message. place in our policy
Prime Minister Theresa May's Official Critic
"The Prime Minister has always been very clear that we need to set a tone for public discourse that is neither dehumanizing nor pejorative.
"Personal vitriol does not belong in our politics. "
The vicious attacks marked the beginning of a week that should be difficult for the Prime Minister. Some observers have speculated that the number of MPs calling for his removal could reach 48, triggering a vote of no confidence. .
Ms May told MEPs that the UK Brexit agreement is 95% complete and that "significant progress" has been made on issues such as security, transportation and services from the tumultuous summit of Salzburg last month.
After holding talks with European leaders in Brussels, the Prime Minister said that the form of agreement on the withdrawal of the withdrawal agreement was now clear.
Protocols have been developed on how Brexit will affect Gibraltar and the United Kingdom's military base in Cyprus.
"And all this, just for the last three weeks, is added to the
Ms. May spoke to colleagues at the Cabinet during long conference calls over the weekend, that Downing Street described as an opportunity to "take stock of the negotiations".
will tell the House of Commons that "all of this taken together, 95% of the withdrawal agreement and its protocols are now settled".
But she will add: "As I indicated last week, the original proposal of the EU We could not accept it because it would involve creating a customs border along the sea of Ireland and break the integrity of the United Kingdom.
"I do not believe that a British prime minister can ever accept that, and I certainly will not do it."
Furious backbenchers warned the premier that she was "drinking in last chance lounge" after tensions erupted around her bargaining strategy following the summit from Brussels.
But Brexiteer chief Chris Grayling called for calm, warning of the danger of Britain leaving the EU without an agreement.
Asked about a possible vote of censorship, the State Secretary for Transport told the BBC radio show of the Today 4 broadcast: "It's really a moment of calm and vertigo. [19659002] "We have to go to the last negotiation. There will be a vote in Parliament that will follow.
"The fact is that if the proposed agreement is something that can not end up in Parliament, we will find ourselves in a situation of non-agreement, so it is in everyone's interest. The interest, the European Union and ourselves, is to make sure that what we agree is accepted by both parties. "
Former Ministers Iain Duncan Smith and Owen Paterson have denied having damaged the Prime Minister after meeting in Brussels with Michel Barnier, Chief Brexit Negotiator, [19659002] Mr. Duncan Smith said, "We present some ideas that we feel are constructive and we have had a constructive discussion.
"We will now return to discuss with the government."
Anyone speaking in violent terms about the Prime Minister's future "must have the highest weight of the Conservative Party."
"It has nothing to do with our politics, nor with this issue," he said. Reporters in Brussels, adding that Ms. May had "all her support".
To the question of whether the EU was preparing urgent plans for a change of political leadership in the UK, European Commission spokeswoman Margaritis Schinas said: "In Regarding the political developments in Whitehall, this is for Whitehall, not for the Berlaymont (EC headquarters in Brussels). "
Labor warned Ms. May that she would not support her plan for Brexit upon her arrival in the Commons.
Brexit Shadow Secretary Sir Keir Starmer said there is a "real lack of confidence" in the fact that Ms. May can report "anything as a bargain".