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						UK PM May sticks to Brexit deal as opponents seek formal 
						challenge
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		 [November 19, 2018]   
		By Kylie MacLellan and William James 
 LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister 
		Theresa May vowed on Monday to stick to her draft European Union divorce 
		deal as dissenting lawmakers in her own party tried to trigger a 
		leadership challenge.
 
 Since striking a deal with the EU on Tuesday, May has faced the most 
		perilous crisis of her premiership with several ministers resigning, 
		including her Brexit minister.
 
 May has pledged to fight on, warning that toppling her risks delaying 
		Britain's exit from the EU or leaving without a deal, a step that could 
		thrust the world's fifth largest economy into the unknown.
 
 "We have in view a deal that will work for the UK and, let no one be in 
		any doubt, I am determined to deliver it," May said in a speech to 
		Britain's premier business lobby, the CBI, to loud applause. "We are not 
		talking about political theory but the reality of people's lives and 
		livelihoods."
 
 
		
		 
		"While the world is changing fast, our geography is not: Europe will 
		always be our most proximate goods market, and ensuring we have 
		free-flowing borders is crucial," May said, citing the importance of the 
		automotive industry.
 
 The EU is due to hold a summit to discuss the draft deal on Nov. 25. 
		Some Brexit-supporting ministers are reported to want to rewrite parts 
		of it, though Germany has ruled this out.
 
 The EU's Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, said the draft deal was 
		"fair and balanced".
 
 May said she wanted any Brexit transition, during which Britain will 
		remain a member in all but name, to have ended by the time of the next 
		national election, due in 2022.
 
 Sterling fell to $1.2796 <GBP=D3> after May spoke.
 
 BREXIT "WRECKING BALL"
 
 More than two years after the United Kingdom voted to leave the EU, it 
		is still unclear how, on what terms or even if it will leave as planned 
		on March 29, 2019.
 
 Many business chiefs and investors fear politics could scupper an 
		agreement, thrusting the economy into a no-deal Brexit that they say 
		would weaken the West, spook financial markets and silt up the arteries 
		of trade.
 
 CBI President John Allan said such a Brexit would be a "wrecking ball" 
		for Britain's economy while CBI Director-General Carolyn Fairbairn said 
		politicians were playing a high-stakes game that could lead to an 
		accidental 'no-deal' departure.
 
 
		
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			Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May leaves 10 Downing Street via 
			the back exit in London, Britain, November 16, 2018. REUTERS/Peter 
			Nicholls 
            
			 
"Surely, surely, we can do better than this," she said.
 Asked about the unpopularity of her deal among many in her party, May said 
voters should listen to business.
 
However, rebels in her own Conservative Party who say the deal will leave 
Britain in indefinite subjugation to the EU are attempting to trigger a vote of 
no confidence in her leadership.
 The chairman of the party's "1922 Committee", Graham Brady, said on Sunday the 
threshold of 48 letters from lawmakers had not yet been reached. He also said if 
there were a vote, May would win.
 
 The Sun newspaper said the rebels were six letters short.
 
 One of them, Simon Clarke, told BBC radio: "This day must be the point at which 
... action is taken."
 
 May's biggest challenge will be getting the deal through parliament. The DUP, a 
small Northern Irish party that props up her minority government, has threatened 
to pull its support because the deal could end up treating Northern Ireland 
differently from the rest of the United Kingdom.
 
Also speaking at the CBI conference, opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn was 
set to describe the deal as "a botched, worst-of-all-worlds deal which is bad 
for Britain, leaving the country in an indefinite halfway house without a real 
say".
 Corbyn, who has said his party will oppose May's deal in parliament, was due to 
say Labour's plan for Brexit would include a new, comprehensive and permanent 
customs union, and a "strong single-market relationship".
 
 
"The government is trying to force a bad deal that doesn't meet our country's 
needs by threatening us all with the chaos and serious damage to our economy of 
a no deal outcome," an advance text of his speech said.
 (Additional reporting by Elizabeth Piper, Kate Holton and James Davey; Writing 
by Michael Holden and Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Janet 
Lawrence)
 
				 
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