Brexit: MPs vote to take control of Brexit process for indicative votes

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MPs have voted to take control of Commons business in an unprecedented move to try to find a majority for any Brexit option.

 

The government was defeated by 329 votes to 302 on the cross-party amendment setting up a series of votes on Wednesday to find out what kind of Brexit has most support among MPs.

 

PM Theresa May has said there is no guarantee she will abide by their wish.

 

Thirty Tory MPs voted against the government, including three ministers.

 

Richard Harrington, Alistair Burt and Steve Brine resigned to join the rebels, with Mr Harrington accusing the government of “playing roulette with the lives and livelihoods” of Britons.

 

Mr Harrington said in his resignation letter that as industry minister, he had been told the government approach was “resulting in cancelled investment decisions, business being placed abroad, and a sense of ridicule for British businesses”.

 

But supporters of Conservative backbencher Sir Oliver Letwin’s amendment said they did not trust the government to give MPs a say on the full range of Brexit options.

 

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn was among them. He said the government “must take the process seriously”.

 

He added: “The government has failed and this House must, and I believe will, succeed.”

 

He said MPs would want to find a consensus on the way forward, including a possible “confirmatory vote” on the PM’s deal by the public – something Mrs May told MPs earlier she did not want because Remain would be on the ballot paper.

 

MPs involved in the bid tonight say if there is a majority for a plan that’s not the prime minister’s deal then there would be “uproar” if Theresa May tried to ignore it.

 

It is possible, of course, that Brexiteers who have been resisting the prime minister’s deal so far take fright at Parliament having more control of the process, and are more likely to come in line.

 

That’s because, generally, the make-up of MPs are more likely to back a softer deal than the one on offer.

 

So faced with the choice of Theresa May’s compromise this week, or a much longer wrangle to a closer relationship with the EU than the prime minister has negotiated, it is not impossible that the numbers will move in her favour.