Corbyn demands five key changes if May wants to secure Labour’s Brexit backing

7 Feb, 2019 11:57 / Updated 6 years ago

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has written a letter to UK Prime Minister Theresa May to outline five legally binding changes she must make to her Brexit deal, if she is to secure the backing of his party.

In his letter to the PM, Corbyn argued that the EU have been very clear on the importance of the Irish backstop and that any attempt to seek modifications on this issue is not a “credible or significant response,” suggesting such changes would not get her Brexit deal through the UK’s parliament.

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The Labour leader called on May to rework the political declaration contained within the agreement with the EU, which sets out the framework for the UK’s future relationship with the EU, including the commitment to a customs union.

Corbyn’s changes

His intervention has sparked a backlash from pro-EU Labour MPs, who have long advocated a second referendum and who have in recent weeks been stepping up pressure on Corbyn and his shadow cabinet to make it official party policy.

Labour MP for Nottingham East, Chris Leslie, has taken to social media claiming his party’s Brexit policy, agreed at conference, was in the bin and accused Corbyn of enabling a Tory Brexit. Centrist Labour MP Chuka Umunna, who has supported the official ‘people’s vote’ campaign tweeted: “This is not Opposition.”

However, left-wing journalists and grassroots activists Owen Jones and Paul Mason have come out in support of Corbyn’s Brexit demands. Mason told his Twitter followers that “any Labour MP who undermines this stance should have whip withdrawn.”

May arrives in Brussels on Thursday for showdown talks with EU officials in a desperate attempt to broker the necessary changes she requires to get her deal through the House of Commons.

President of the EU Council Donald Tusk caused outrage among Brexiteers on Wednesday, after he lashed out at the UK, declaring that he wondered what the “special place in hell” looks like for those who pushed for Brexit without a clear plan on how to deliver it.

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