Sunday, January 11, 2026
ADVT 
International

Indian-Origin UK Lawmaker Challenges Theresa May's Brexit Strategy

IANS, 03 Sep, 2018 11:43 PM
    Indian-origin Conservative party lawmaker and former UK Cabinet minister Priti Patel is among 20 party rebels who are challenging British Prime Minister Theresa May's Brexit strategy with a 'Stand Up 4 Brexit' campaign.
     
     
    The grassroots drive against any negotiations with the European Union (EU) that could lead to a so-called soft Brexit is being backed by another ex-minister Ian Duncan Smith and is expected to mount pressure on May to ditch her Chequers plan, which is rejected by Eurosceptic lawmakers within her Conservative party.
     
     
    'Stand Up 4 Brexit' supporters, who also include former foreign secretary Boris Johnson's key ally Tory lawmaker Conor Burns, pledge to fight plans to keep the EU rules on British goods and free movement in terms of migration.
     
     
    Ms Patel, a leading pro-Brexit voice in the lead up to the referendum in favour of Britain's exit from the EU in June 2016, has previously called on the government to be "tougher" in its negotiations with Brussels.
     
     
    The Stand Up 4 Brexit campaign is building momentum as Mr Johnson, the poster boy for the pro-Brexit camp, launched a scathing attack on Theresa May's plans in his weekly newspaper column in 'The Daily Telegraph' on Monday, saying the approach agreed at Chequers "means disaster" for Britain.
     
     
     
    Mr Johnson, who had resigned as government minister in July in protest at the deal agreed by the Cabinet at Chequers - the British Prime Minister's country residence - likened the Brexit negotiations to a wrestling match, in which an EU "victory" was inevitable... "with the UK lying flat on the canvas and 12 stars circling symbolically over our semi-conscious head".
     
     
    Mr Johnson said negotiations based on the Chequers plan had so far seen the EU take "every important trick", adding, "The UK has agreed to hand over GBP 40 billion of taxpayers' money for two-thirds of diddly squat [nothing]."
     
     
    The so-called Chequers plan put forth by PM May would see Britain agreeing a "common rulebook" with the European Union for trading in goods, in an attempt to maintain frictionless trade at the border.
     
     
    Critics of the strategy argue this would leave the UK tied to the EU rules even after it formally leaves the economic bloc on March 29 next year, and prevent Britain from striking its own trade deals in years to come.
     
     
    Mr Johnson claims in his column that the UK had "gone into battle with the white flag fluttering over our leading tank" with such a plan.
     
     
     
    Downing Street, however, shot down the criticism, with Theresa May's official spokesperson saying, "Boris Johnson resigned over Chequers. There's no new ideas in this article to respond to".
     
     
    "What we need at this time is serious leadership with a serious plan and that's exactly what the country has with this prime minister and this Brexit plan. She is a serious Prime Minister and she has put forward serious proposals," the spokesperson added.
     
     
    In her own column over the weekend, Theresa May wrote that she was "confident" a "good deal" could be reached on Brexit.
     
     
    "Our White Paper proposals are a good deal for Britain. They will allow frictionless trade in goods and agricultural products, protecting the jobs that depend on just in time supply chains," she said.
     
     
     
     
    "Unlike alternatives, they will not allow the break-up of our precious Union; nor will they undermine the Belfast Agreement with a hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland," she wrote.
     
     
    Meanwhile, EU's chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier made matters more difficult by criticising PM May's Chequers plan as marking an "end" to the European project.
     
    He used an interview with German newspaper 'Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung' to rubbish the Chequers strategy for a future UK-EU relationship, saying he is "strongly opposed" to the proposals.
     
     
    As the UK's parliamentary recess period of August comes to an end and the political parties in the country prepare for their annual party conferences this month, the battle lines around Brexit are expected to deepen further.
     
     
    Even after the UK and the EU have reached some sort of an agreement over their future trading relationship, any agreed plan will then be tabled before lawmakers for a vote - a process which will be accompanied with its own share of upheavals.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    2 Pakistani Nationals Held For Supplying Suicide Vests In Afghanistan

    2 Pakistani Nationals Held For Supplying Suicide Vests In Afghanistan
    Two Pakistani nationals were arrested on charges of supplying suicide vests allegedly to the insurgents in Afghanistan's Nangarhar province on Tuesday.

    2 Pakistani Nationals Held For Supplying Suicide Vests In Afghanistan

    Community Upset After Former B.C. Mayor Charged With Numerous Sex Offences

    An Indigenous leader in central British Columbia says his community is angry and disheartened after its former mayor was charged with sex-related offences.

    Community Upset After Former B.C. Mayor Charged With Numerous Sex Offences

    Blast In UK Shop That Killed Indian-Origin Family Caused By Petrol

    Blast In UK Shop That Killed Indian-Origin Family Caused By Petrol
    An explosion in a Polish shop in Leicester that killed five people, including members of an Indian-origin family, was caused by petrol which was spread throughout the premises, a UK court was told on Monday.

    Blast In UK Shop That Killed Indian-Origin Family Caused By Petrol

    US Navy Veteran, Accused Of Killing Indian Techie, Could Plead Guilty

    US Navy Veteran, Accused Of Killing Indian Techie, Could Plead Guilty
    A US Navy veteran charged with killing an Indian techie and injuring two others in a racially motivated hate crime at a bar in Kansas City last year could enter into a plea deal, media reports have said.

    US Navy Veteran, Accused Of Killing Indian Techie, Could Plead Guilty

    British-Indian Family Banned From Taking Baby Girl To India For Circumcision

    British-Indian Family Banned From Taking Baby Girl To India For Circumcision
    A judge at Manchester County and Family Court ruled yesterday that the child, who will turn two this year, is at risk because religious and cultural pressure had overridden her mother's "maternal instinct".

    British-Indian Family Banned From Taking Baby Girl To India For Circumcision

    Dawood Keen To Return To India, Government Spurns ‘Preconditions'

    Well-known criminal lawyer Shyam Keswani on Tuesday said fugitive mafia don Dawood Ibrahim Kaskar is reportedly "keen to return to India" but with certain preconditions which are not acceptable to the Indian government.

    Dawood Keen To Return To India, Government Spurns ‘Preconditions'