Rabu, 27 Maret 2019

Theresa May says she will resign as prime minister after she 'delivers Brexit' - The Washington Post

BREAKING NEWS: The British leader bowed to pressure from her Conservative Party and said she will resign before the next phase of Brexit talks. She is seeking to win majority backing for her twice-rejected Brexit withdrawal deal, and her political future was the price demanded by hardline Brexit supporters.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

LONDON — The British Parliament is set to vote Wednesday night on what kind of Brexit the fractious, quarreling, paralyzed lawmakers want.

It is possible their answer will be a mush.

It is also possible that a way forward might emerge in a series of “indicative” votes for or against a “soft” or “hard” exit from the European Union.

The Parliament may signal whether lawmakers want a political and trade relationship with Europe like Norway has — or whether Britain should go it alone.

Lawmakers could also push for a second referendum to give voters another say on how, or whether, they want to leave the E.U.

In the meantime, Prime Minister Theresa May is scrambling to hold on to her job, as plotters in her own Conservative Party scheme to unseat her. 

While top Tories daily predict her ousting, the remarkable Mrs. May continues to hang on.

Traditionally, the British Parliament has a brake but not a steering wheel. This week, though, lawmakers have seized control — for a couple days — of Britain’s exit process.

The votes that begin Wednesday will be nonbinding. May has said she is willing to hear what the lawmakers have to say, while at the same time she worries the votes will stoke a constitutional crisis. May’s government opposed the voting scheme but is too weak to stop it.

The House of Commons has in the past three months said what it does not want. Lawmakers two times voted overwhelmingly against May’s Brexit deal. They also said they do not want Britain to leave the continental trading bloc without a deal.

Speaker John Bercow chose eight of 16 proposals submitted to proceed to a debate and a vote. 

Why 16 when you can have 17 options? asked the Twittersphere, which saw social media users on Wednesday coming up with amusing alternatives for how to break the deadlock, including “Bring in Judge Judy” and “Let the Queen decide.”

Among the actual proposals brought forward is a Norway-style relationship with the E.U. That would allow frictionless, tariff-free trade, but it might make Britain accept the free flow of European migrants — a major objection among those who voted to leave the E.U.

The opposition Labour Party, meanwhile, is pushing an “alternative customs union” Brexit plan.

Other options include leaving the E.U. without a deal or canceling Brexit altogether.

Labour lawmaker Hilary Benn told the BBC that he wanted the prime minister “to look at what we might be able to agree on and say, ‘Okay, I’m prepared to move.’ That is what good leadership is. Unfortunately there hasn’t been any since this began.”

The fate of May’s troubled premiership has come under increasing scrutiny. She is expected to address her backbench lawmakers Wednesday afternoon amid growing speculation that she could announce the date of her departure.

Boris Johnson, a Conservative lawmaker who is said to have ambitions for the top job, has suggested that he could back May’s deal if she spelled out her departure.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn told Parliament on Wednesday that May had a “very clear choice . . . either listen and change course — or go.”

She is “failing to deliver Brexit because she can’t build a consensus, is unable to compromise and unable to reunite the country,” he said.

A recent YouGov poll found that 31 percent of the public preferred May as prime minister, 19 percent said Corbyn, and 46 percent were not sure.

May has so far indicated that she is pressing on. She suggested on Wednesday that she could bring back her deal — dubbed MV3 — for a third time this week.

During lively Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday, May told a fellow Conservative lawmaker who has voted twice against her deal: “We can guarantee delivering on Brexit if this week he and others in this House support the deal.”

On the other side of the English Channel, the Europeans wait and wait. Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, told legislators Wednesday in Brussels that the E.U. should be open to a long extension if Britain wanted to “rethink” its strategy.

“You cannot betray the 6 million people who signed a petition to revoke Article 50 — the 1 million people who marched for a people’s vote or the increasing majority of people who want to remain in the European Union,” Tusk said.

Tusk was referring to the “Cancel Brexit” petition hosted on Parliament’s website, alongside the mass demonstration staged Saturday in London — probably the biggest public demonstration in Britain in a century.

As Parliament gets its indicative votes, May is still pressing lawmakers to support her Brexit deal in a third vote, which could take place later this week.

Jacob Rees-Mogg, a Conservative lawmaker and something of a power broker in these negotiations, said he would back May’s deal as long as Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionists did. He tweeted that “half a loaf is better than no bread.”

Explaining the U-turn, he told the BBC that he changed his mind because the government has backed away from his preferred option, leaving without a deal, and May’s deal at least delivered Brexit.

Things may be confusing on the Conservative benches, but they aren’t any clearer on the Labour ones.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4, Labour lawmaker Peter Kyle spoke about his preferred Brexit option, that any deal passed should be put to a public vote. He said that during the “indicative” voting Wednesday evening, Corbyn “will order” the party’s lawmakers to vote for this.

Labour lawmaker Barry Gardiner didn’t appear to get that memo. He told the same radio program that option was “not where our policy has been” and that “the Labour Party is not a remain party — we have accepted the result of the referendum.” His name was soon trending on social media.

Like the Conservative Party, the Labour Party has been trying to walk a tightrope, appeasing both the “remainers” and “leavers” in their party. It did not go unnoticed at the massive on march Saturday — where an estimated 1 million took to the streets to demand a second referendum — that Labour sent its deputy leader to address the crowds but not its leader.

Read more:

Brits pretend they’re sick of Brexit. But truth is they’re obsessed.

Britain will not leave on March 29 after E.U. allows a short Brexit reprieve

What is Brexit? Britain’s political drama, explained.

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

Like Washington Post World on Facebook and stay updated on foreign news

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/brexit-votes/2019/03/27/d044bb28-4fcc-11e9-bdb7-44f948cc0605_story.html

2019-03-27 17:37:30Z
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Mission Shakti: India shoots down live satellite in space, says PM Narendra Modi - The Independent

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Mission Shakti: India shoots down live satellite in space, says PM Narendra Modi  The Independent
  2. India shoots down satellite in space; Modi hails major breakthrough  CNBC
  3. Indian PM Modi boasts success of anti-satellite missile launch ahead of election  NBC News
  4. India Successfully Tests Satellite-Killer Missile  The Wall Street Journal
  5. Modi's space weapon announcement struggles for lift-off  The Guardian
  6. View full coverage on Google News

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/india-satellite-missile-system-shakti-test-modi-space-a8841381.html

2019-03-27 14:26:00Z
52780250469645

Trump tells Russia to get its troops out of Venezuela - Reuters

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday called on Russia to pull its troops from Venezuela and warned that “all options” were open to make that happen.

U.S. President Donald Trump meets with Fabiana Rosales, wife of Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido, in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, U.S., March 27, 2019. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

The arrival of two Russian air force planes carrying nearly 100 Russian troops outside Caracas on Saturday has escalated the political crisis in Venezuela.

Russia and China have backed President Nicolas Maduro, while the United States and most Western countries support opposition leader Juan Guaido. In January, he invoked the constitution to assume the country’s interim presidency, arguing Maduro’s 2018 re-election was illegitimate.

“Russia has to get out,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office, where he met with Guaido’s wife, Fabiana Rosales.

The U.S. government believes the Russian troops include special forces and cybersecurity personnel.

Asked how he would make Russian forces leave, Trump said: “We’ll see. All options are open.”

Russia has bilateral relations and agreements with Venezuela which it plans to honor, Russian Deputy U.N. Ambassador Dmitry Polyanskiy said, in response to Trump’s comments.

“It’s not up to US to decide actions and fate of other countries. It’s only up to the people of Venezuela and its only legitimate president Nicolas Maduro,” Polyanskiy said on Twitter.

Maduro, who retains control of state functions and the country’s military, has said Guaido is a puppet of the United States.

Rosales, a 26-year-old journalist and opposition activist, told Trump that Guaido was attacked on Tuesday, though she did not provide details.

“I fear for my husband’s life,” she said. She was accompanied by the wife and sister of Roberto Marrero, Guaido’s chief of staff, who was arrested and detained last week.

Earlier at the White House, Rosales met Vice President Mike Pence, and told him that power outages and food shortages were hurting children in her country.

“They are trying to break our morale. They want to submerge us in eternal darkness. But let me tell you that there is light, and the light is here,” Rosales told Pence.

She is slated to meet U.S. first lady Melania Trump in Palm Beach on Thursday on a swing through South Florida, home to the largest community of Venezuelan exiles in the United States.

Slideshow (7 Images)

Rosales is also slated to meet with lawmakers on Capitol Hill and members of the Venezuelan diaspora at a prominent Washington think tank.

Pence praised Rosales for being “courageous.”

“Our message very simply is: We’re with you,” Pence said.

Reporting by Roberta Rampton and Steve Holland; additional reporting by Michelle Nichols in New York and Doina Chiacu and Makini Brice in Washington; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe

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https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuelan-politics-usa/trump-tells-russia-to-get-its-troops-out-of-venezuela-idUSKCN1R81OQ

2019-03-27 15:16:00Z
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Parliament votes on what sort of Brexit it wants - The Washington Post

LONDON — The British Parliament is set to vote Wednesday night on what kind of Brexit the fractious, quarreling, paralyzed lawmakers want.

It is possible their answer will be a mush.

It is also possible that a way forward might emerge in a series of “indicative” votes for or against a “soft” or “hard” exit from the European Union.

The Parliament may signal whether lawmakers want a political and trade relationship with Europe like Norway has — or whether Britain should go it alone.

Lawmakers could also push for a second referendum to give voters another say on how, or whether, they want to leave the E.U.

In the meantime, Prime Minister Theresa May is scrambling to hold on to her job, as plotters in her own Conservative Party scheme to unseat her. 

While top Tories daily predict her ousting, the remarkable Mrs. May continues to hang on.

Traditionally, the British Parliament has a brake but not a steering wheel. This week, though, lawmakers have seized control — for a couple days — of Britain’s exit process.

The votes that begin Wednesday will be nonbinding. May has said she is willing to hear what the lawmakers have to say, while at the same time she worries the votes will stoke a constitutional crisis. May’s government opposed the voting scheme but is too weak to stop it.

The House of Commons has in the past three months said what it does not want. Lawmakers two times voted overwhelmingly against May’s Brexit deal. They also said they do not want Britain to leave the continental trading bloc without a deal.

Speaker John Bercow chose eight of 16 proposals submitted to proceed to a debate and a vote. 

Why 16 when you can have 17 options? asked the Twittersphere, which saw social media users on Wednesday coming up with amusing alternatives for how to break the deadlock, including “Bring in Judge Judy” and “Let the Queen decide.”

Among the actual proposals brought forward is a Norway-style relationship with the E.U. That would allow frictionless, tariff-free trade, but it might make Britain accept the free flow of European migrants — a major objection among those who voted to leave the E.U.

The opposition Labour Party, meanwhile, is pushing an “alternative customs union” Brexit plan.

Other options include leaving the E.U. without a deal or canceling Brexit altogether.

Labour lawmaker Hilary Benn told the BBC that he wanted the prime minister “to look at what we might be able to agree on and say, ‘Okay, I’m prepared to move.’ That is what good leadership is. Unfortunately there hasn’t been any since this began.”

The fate of May’s troubled premiership has come under increasing scrutiny. She is expected to address her backbench lawmakers Wednesday afternoon amid growing speculation that she could announce the date of her departure.

Boris Johnson, a Conservative lawmaker who is said to have ambitions for the top job, has suggested that he could back May’s deal if she spelled out her departure.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn told Parliament on Wednesday that May had a “very clear choice . . . either listen and change course — or go.”

She is “failing to deliver Brexit because she can’t build a consensus, is unable to compromise and unable to reunite the country,” he said.

A recent YouGov poll found that 31 percent of the public preferred May as prime minister, 19 percent said Corbyn, and 46 percent were not sure.

May has so far indicated that she is pressing on. She suggested on Wednesday that she could bring back her deal — dubbed MV3 — for a third time this week.

During lively Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday, May told a fellow Conservative lawmaker who has voted twice against her deal: “We can guarantee delivering on Brexit if this week he and others in this House support the deal.”

On the other side of the English Channel, the Europeans wait and wait. Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, told legislators Wednesday in Brussels that the E.U. should be open to a long extension if Britain wanted to “rethink” its strategy.

“You cannot betray the 6 million people who signed a petition to revoke Article 50 — the 1 million people who marched for a people’s vote or the increasing majority of people who want to remain in the European Union,” Tusk said.

Tusk was referring to the “Cancel Brexit” petition hosted on Parliament’s website, alongside the mass demonstration staged Saturday in London — probably the biggest public demonstration in Britain in a century.

As Parliament gets its indicative votes, May is still pressing lawmakers to support her Brexit deal in a third vote, which could take place later this week.

Jacob Rees-Mogg, a Conservative lawmaker and something of a power broker in these negotiations, said he would back May’s deal as long as Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionists did. He tweeted that “half a loaf is better than no bread.”

Explaining the U-turn, he told the BBC that he changed his mind because the government has backed away from his preferred option, leaving without a deal, and May’s deal at least delivered Brexit.

Things may be confusing on the Conservative benches, but they aren’t any clearer on the Labour ones.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4, Labour lawmaker Peter Kyle spoke about his preferred Brexit option, that any deal passed should be put to a public vote. He said that during the “indicative” voting Wednesday evening, Corbyn “will order” the party’s lawmakers to vote for this.

Labour lawmaker Barry Gardiner didn’t appear to get that memo. He told the same radio program that option was “not where our policy has been” and that “the Labour Party is not a remain party — we have accepted the result of the referendum.” His name was soon trending on social media.

Like the Conservative Party, the Labour Party has been trying to walk a tightrope, appeasing both the “remainers” and “leavers” in their party. It did not go unnoticed at the massive on march Saturday — where an estimated 1 million took to the streets to demand a second referendum — that Labour sent its deputy leader to address the crowds but not its leader.

Read more:

Brits pretend they’re sick of Brexit. But truth is they’re obsessed.

Britain will not leave on March 29 after E.U. allows a short Brexit reprieve

What is Brexit? Britain’s political drama, explained.

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

Like Washington Post World on Facebook and stay updated on foreign news

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/brexit-votes/2019/03/27/d044bb28-4fcc-11e9-bdb7-44f948cc0605_story.html

2019-03-27 15:47:35Z
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U.K. Parliament Faces a Key Brexit Question: What Does It Want? - The New York Times

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U.K. Parliament Faces a Key Brexit Question: What Does It Want?

Image
Brexit opponents outside the Houses of Parliament in London. Lawmakers are expected to vote on Wednesday on a range of options for Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union.CreditCreditJack Taylor/Getty Images

LONDON — Trying to take control of Britain’s tortured departure from the European Union, lawmakers will attempt on Wednesday to answer the crucial question that has gone unanswered for two years: What does Parliament want?

Over the opposition of Prime Minister Theresa May, lawmakers are expected to vote on a range of options for the withdrawal process known as Brexit — an extremely rare rebuff of a British leader.

It could prove to be an extraordinary turning point, as members of Parliament weigh alternatives that Mrs. May has refused to put before them. A new consensus could emerge across party lines, and she could give in to mounting pressure within her party to say when she will step down.

Or, in the plausible event that the lawmakers prove unable to agree on anything, the voting might add to the chaos.

Image
Prime Minister Theresa May in Parliament on Monday. The Brexit agreement that she negotiated has twice been rejected by lawmakers.CreditMark Duffy/UK Parliament, via Reuters

Parliament’s step comes amid a deepening crisis in British politics, with the government disintegrating, the cabinet paralyzed and Mrs. May shifting strategies seemingly by the day, while facing repeated calls to resign.

All of this is unfolding before an increasingly frustrated and cynical public that is asking searching questions about British democracy and the political elite, and whether either is capable of governing in the national interest.

In the meantime, the world looks on at Britain’s follies in bewilderment. “If you compared Britain to a sphinx, the sphinx would be an open book by comparison,” Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the European Commission, told the European Parliament on Wednesday at a meeting in Strasbourg, France. “Let’s see how that book speaks over the next week or so.”

In another rebuff for Mrs. May, lawmakers saw off an effort by the government Wednesday afternoon to stop the votes, defeating the measure by 331 votes to 287. The speaker of the house, John Bercow, selected eight Brexit plans to be voted on, including several that would keep Britain closely tied to the European Union, in a so-called soft Brexit. Others would see Britain leaving without any deal, require an exit agreement be confirmed in a referendum or cancel Brexit completely.

Mr. Bercow also repeated an earlier ruling that, if Mrs. May tries to bring back her plan for a third vote soon, she would have to satisfy him that it was different from the version that has twice failed. In his statement, Mr. Bercow warned that he would not allow procedural devices to circumvent his decision.

Lawmakers have already twice rejected the Brexit agreement that Mrs. May painstakingly negotiated with the European Union, each time by large margins. Last week, European Union leaders agreed to Britain’s request to delay its departure, which had been set to take effect on Friday, to avoid a chaotic exit without a deal in place.

But time is short, and Europe has grown frustrated with the deadlock. Under the terms of the postponement, Brexit will take effect on May 22 only if Parliament accepts Mrs. May’s deal this week. If it does not, the new deadline is April 12.

The European Union is “expecting the United Kingdom to indicate a way forward,” Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, said at the meeting in Strasbourg.

But European leaders reiterated that they were still open to a long Brexit delay — perhaps two years — if, as Mr. Tusk said, “the U.K. wishes to rethink its Brexit strategy.” That delay would have to be agreed to by April 12, just 16 days away.

Most analysts in Britain believe that Mrs. May is in the twilight of her premiership, and the dramatic events in Parliament underscore the extent to which she has lost control of a process that has divided her government and her party. She has suffered a series of cabinet resignations and defeats in parliamentary votes that has no parallel in modern British history.

Image
Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, said on Wednesday that the European Union was expecting Britain “to indicate a way forward.”CreditFrederick Florin/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Voting in Parliament is expected to begin at 7 p.m. Shortly before that, Mrs. May is to meet privately with lawmakers in her Conservative Party, some of whom are calling for her to stand down — and soon — as the price for them to switch their votes and support her unpopular Brexit plan.

There was a glimmer of hope for her. Some hard-line pro-Brexit lawmakers, including Jacob Rees-Mogg, who leads a faction known as the European Research Group, are indicating that they might now support her deal, after months of opposing it.

Mrs. May’s plan could return to Parliament later this week if she gets more pledges of support, including from the Democratic Unionist Party of Northern Ireland, whose 10 lawmakers normally support the government but currently oppose Mrs. May’s Brexit blueprint.

On Wednesday, the leader of the House of Commons, Andrea Leadsom, a Conservative lawmaker, told the BBC there was a “real possibility” that Mrs. May’s plan could come back for a vote as soon as Thursday.

A third attempt to pass it would be a very tall order: Mrs. May would need to win the support of about 70 lawmakers who have already voted against it twice. If she managed that, she would almost certainly have quashed Parliament’s rebellion and ensured that Brexit would take place soon and on her terms.

Image
Jacob Rees-Mogg is among the hard-line pro-Brexit lawmakers who have indicated that they might now support Mrs. May’s plan, despite previous objections.CreditToby Melville/Reuters

On Wednesday, the focus will be on the extraordinary parliamentary proceedings, orchestrated by a multiparty group led by a veteran Conservative lawmaker, Oliver Letwin. About 16 options for Brexit have been proposed, perhaps half of which will be selected for voting by the speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow.

Those are likely to include leaving the European Union but keeping very close ties to it, revoking Brexit, putting any plan to a referendum, and quitting without any agreement.

Lawmakers will be allowed to vote for as many of the options as they want. In the first instance, that is very unlikely to produce clarity, and another day of debate and votes will probably be required on Monday.

The government has said that it will not be bound by any result of these “indicative votes.” But some lawmakers are threatening that, if necessary, they will try to legislate to force the government to accept any consensus that ultimately emerges.

Mrs. May will be hoping that the prospect of Parliament’s agreeing to closer ties with the bloc than those envisaged in her plan will spook hard-line Brexit supporters into backing her proposals.

But some Conservative lawmakers also want her to resign soon so they can install a successor in whom they have more trust to take charge of detailed trade negotiations that would take place after Brexit.

Whether Mrs. May offers a detailed timetable for her resignation remains a pressing question. On Wednesday, asked whether she wanted Mrs. May to stay on, Ms. Leadsom said it was “a matter for her,” adding “I am not going to express a view.”

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/27/world/europe/brexit-uk-parliament.html

2019-03-27 13:37:31Z
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U.K. Parliament Faces a Key Brexit Question: What Does It Want? - The New York Times

Advertisement

U.K. Parliament Faces a Key Brexit Question: What Does It Want?

Image
Brexit opponents outside the Houses of Parliament in London. Lawmakers are expected to vote on Wednesday on a range of options for Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union.CreditCreditJack Taylor/Getty Images

LONDON — Trying to take control of Britain’s tortured departure from the European Union, lawmakers will attempt on Wednesday to answer the crucial question that has gone unanswered for two years: What does Parliament want?

Over the opposition of Prime Minister Theresa May, lawmakers are expected to vote on a range of options for the withdrawal process known as Brexit — an extremely rare rebuff of a British leader.

It could prove to be an extraordinary turning point, as members of Parliament weigh alternatives that Mrs. May has refused to put before them. A new consensus could emerge across party lines, and she could give in to mounting pressure within her party to say when she will step down.

Or, in the plausible event that the lawmakers prove unable to agree on anything, the voting might add to the chaos.

Image
Prime Minister Theresa May in Parliament on Monday. The Brexit agreement that she negotiated has twice been rejected by lawmakers.CreditMark Duffy/UK Parliament, via Reuters

Parliament’s step comes amid a deepening crisis in British politics, with the government disintegrating, the cabinet paralyzed and with Mrs. May shifting strategies seemingly by the day and facing repeated calls to resign.

All of this is unfolding before an increasingly frustrated and cynical public that is asking searching questions about British democracy and the political elite, and whether either is capable of governing in the national interest.

In the meantime, the world looks on at Britain’s follies in bewilderment. “If you compared Britain to a sphinx, the sphinx would be an open book by comparison,” Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the European Commission, told the European Parliament on Wednesday at a meeting in Strasbourg, France. “Let’s see how that book speaks over the next week or so.”

Lawmakers have already twice rejected the Brexit agreement that Mrs. May painstakingly negotiated with the European Union, each time by large margins. Last week, European Union leaders agreed to Britain’s request to delay its departure, which had been set to take effect on Friday, to avoid a chaotic exit without a deal in place.

But time is short, and Europe has grown frustrated with the deadlock. Under the terms of the postponement, Brexit will take effect on May 22 only if Parliament accepts Mrs. May’s deal this week. If it does not, the new deadline is April 12.

The European Union is “expecting the United Kingdom to indicate a way forward,” Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, said at the meeting in Strasbourg.

But European leaders reiterated that they were still open to a long Brexit delay — perhaps two years — if, as Mr. Tusk said, “the U.K. wishes to rethink its Brexit strategy.” That delay would have to be agreed to by April 12, just 16 days away.

Most analysts in Britain believe that Mrs. May is in the twilight of her premiership, and the dramatic events in Parliament underscore the extent to which she has lost control of a process that has divided her government and her party. She has suffered a series of cabinet resignations and defeats in parliamentary votes that has no parallel in modern British history.

Voting in Parliament is expected to begin at 7 p.m. Shortly before that, Mrs. May is to meet privately with lawmakers in her Conservative Party, some of whom are calling for her to stand down — and soon — as the price for them to switch their votes and support her unpopular Brexit plan.

There was a glimmer of hope for her. Some hard-line pro-Brexit lawmakers, including Jacob Rees-Mogg, who leads a faction known as the European Research Group, are indicating that they might now support her deal, after months of opposing it.

Image
Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, said on Wednesday that the European Union was expecting Britain “to indicate a way forward.”CreditFrederick Florin/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Mrs. May’s plan could return to Parliament later this week if she gets more pledges of support, including from the Democratic Unionist Party of Northern Ireland, whose 10 lawmakers normally support the government but currently oppose Mrs. May’s Brexit blueprint.

On Wednesday, the leader of the House of Commons, Andrea Leadsom, a Conservative lawmaker, told the BBC there was a “real possibility” that Mrs. May’s plan could come back for a vote as soon as Thursday.

A third attempt to pass it would be a very tall order: Mrs. May would need to win the support of about 70 lawmakers who have already voted against it twice. If she managed that, she would almost certainly have quashed Parliament’s rebellion and ensured that Brexit would take place soon and on her terms.

On Wednesday, the focus will be on the extraordinary parliamentary proceedings, orchestrated by a multiparty group led by a veteran Conservative lawmaker, Oliver Letwin. About 16 options for Brexit have been proposed, perhaps half of which will be selected for voting by the speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow.

Those are likely to include leaving the European Union but keeping very close ties to it, revoking Brexit, putting any plan to a referendum, and quitting without any agreement.

Image
Jacob Rees-Mogg is among the hard-line pro-Brexit lawmakers who have indicated that they might now support Mrs. May’s plan, despite previous objections.CreditToby Melville/Reuters

Lawmakers will be allowed to vote for as many of the options as they want. In the first instance, that is very unlikely to produce clarity, and another day of debate and votes will probably be required on Monday.

The government has said that it will not be bound by any result of these “indicative votes.” But some lawmakers are threatening that, if necessary, they will try to legislate to force the government to accept any consensus that ultimately emerges.

Mrs. May will be hoping that the prospect of Parliament’s agreeing to closer ties with the bloc than those envisaged in her plan will spook hard-line Brexit supporters into backing her proposals.

But some Conservative lawmakers also want her to resign soon so they can install a successor in whom they have more trust to take charge of detailed trade negotiations that would take place after Brexit.

Whether Mrs. May offers a detailed timetable for her resignation remains a pressing question. On Wednesday, asked whether she wanted Mrs. May to stay on, Ms. Leadsom said it was “a matter for her,” adding “I am not going to express a view.”

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/27/world/europe/brexit-uk-parliament.html

2019-03-27 12:22:30Z
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India becomes 4th country to use anti-satellite weapon in demonstration of its 'space power' - Fox News

India became the fourth country to successfully use an anti-satellite weapon after it shot down one of its low earth orbit satellites Wednesday - an act Prime Minister Narendra Modi hailed as the country’s first demonstration of its “space power.

Modi, in an unexpected announcement just weeks before a general election, said scientists shot the live satellite located more than 185 miles away.

“India has made an unprecedented achievement today,” he said, speaking in Hindi. “India registered its name as a space power.”

Indian has had a space program for years, making earth imagine satellites and launch capabilities as a cheaper alternative to Western programs.

AMERICANS WILL RETURN TO MOON BY 2024 -- WITH OR WITHOUT NASA, PENCE SAYS

With its launch on Wednesday, it became only the fourth country to have used such an anti-satellite weapon after the United States, Russia, and China, Modi added.

The Indian foreign ministry said the test lasted 3 minutes and was done in the lower atmosphere to ensure there was no debris in space and that whatever was left would “decay and fall back into Earth within weeks.”

“The capability achieved through the anti-satellite missile test provides credible deterrence against threats to our growing space-based assets from long-range missiles, and proliferation in the types and numbers of missiles,” the foreign ministry said in the statement.

BOEING 737 MAX: IN SIMULATION, PILOTS HAD 40 SECONDS TO FIX ERROR THAT COULD DOOM PLANE, REPORT SAYS

Pallava Bagla, a science writer at the New Delhi Television Channel, said that by successfully hitting the fast-moving satellite, India had crossed a "very significant threshold."

"India demonstrated that we can, if threatened, bring down an enemy satellite in space," Bagla said.

China’s foreign ministry said it hoped all countries “can earnestly protect lasting peace and tranquility in space”. The U.S. and Russia both declined to make any immediate comment, Reuters reported.

The announcement is Modi's latest bid to flex India's military muscle as his party seeks to retain power in polls beginning April 11.

After 40 Indian soldiers were killed in a February suicide bombing in disputed Kashmir, India said it retaliated with a "surgical strike" on a terrorist camp in Pakistan.

Afterward, in an air skirmish, Pakistan shot down one of India's Soviet-era fighter jets, prompting scrutiny of India's aging military hardware.

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Modi said Wednesday that the new capability is "not against anyone," and that India's policy remains against the use of weapons in space.

Earlier this month, acting U.S. Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan argued for a 2020 Pentagon budget shaped by national security threats posed by China, including anti-satellite weapons.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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https://www.foxnews.com/science/india-becomes-4th-country-to-use-anti-satellite-weapon-in-demonstration-of-its-space-power

2019-03-27 13:09:54Z
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