Prime Minister Theresa May has said she will invoke Article 50
by the end of March next year, starting a two-year divorce
procedure. She has said parliament will debate the government's
plans but has ruled out a vote on triggering the divorce.
Hilary Benn, an opposition Labour Party lawmaker who will chair
a newly formed committee set up to scrutinize government policy
on leaving the EU, said on Thursday that it was "inconceivable"
that lawmakers would not have a vote on the UK's final EU exit
deal.
"I'm very clear that Parliament will want to have a say both in
scrutinizing what the negotiating plan is when it is published,
but also Parliament will want to take a decision on the final
deal," Benn told BBC radio.
"It is inconceivable that Parliament shouldn't use its
sovereignty... to determine what it thinks of the deal, this
complex negotiation, when it is finally completed."
Campaigners have taken legal action to argue May and her
ministers do not have the authority to invoke Article 50 of the
EU Lisbon Treaty, the mechanism by which a nation can leave the
bloc, without the explicit backing of parliament.
Britain's parliament will "very likely" have to ratify an
eventual agreement with the European Union on leaving the bloc,
a British government lawyer said on Tuesday.
(Reporting by Sarah Young; editing by Guy Faulconbridge)
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