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Ex-Brexit secretary David Davis suggests ‘meaningful vote’ could be pulled again

The comments come as Theresa May is expected to head for further talks with her EU counterparts.

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Theresa May has been urged to delay the “meaningful vote” on her Brexit deal for a second time.

Former Brexit secretary David Davis has speculated the vote could be put off if Mrs May looks likely to lose it.

His comments come as the Prime Minister prepares to meet EU leaders and seek further “clarifications” in a bid to persuade sceptical MPs to back her deal.

She is expected to speak this week to EU leaders including German chancellor Angela Merkel, Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte and European Council president Donald Tusk in an attempt to break the Brexitlogjam, the Financial Times has reported.

A Downing Street source told the Press Association that talks between Mrs May’s negotiators and their counterparts in Brussels have continued over the Christmas period.

Mr Davis, in a column for the Daily Telegraph, insisted a deal will be reached “at the eleventh hour” because the EU is worried about losing the £39 billion “divorce payment” that would come with a Brexit deal.

The vote, which was delayed at the last minute in December, is currently scheduled for the week beginning January 14.

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David Davis has urged the PM to take her time to get a better Brexit deal

Mr Davis said: “The Withdrawal Agreement does not respect the referendum result. That is why the meaningful vote had to be delayed and one wonders if even the January vote will go ahead.

“Attempts to frighten MPs into supporting it are unlikely to work, because voting down this substandard deal will not result in no Brexit.”

Urging Mrs May to take her time to get a better deal, he adds: “We know that the EU is worried about the loss of the £39 billion ‘divorce’ payment if there is no deal… so this is the moment to be hard-nosed about these issues.

“The more we prepare to leave the EU without a deal, the more likely a good deal becomes.

“Tory MPs must remain committed to delivering the referendum result, as repeated in our manifesto, which pledged to leave the Customs Union and the Single Market and which said that no deal is better than a bad deal. To do otherwise would frankly throw our democracy’s credibility into chaos.”

Meanwhile the current Brexit Secretary Steve Barclay is reported to be convening a meeting on Thursday of ministers to discuss the latest preparations for a no-deal Brexit.

Writing in the Daily Express, the minister said no deal will be “far more likely” if MPs reject Mrs May’s agreement in the upcoming vote.

“We have agreed a deal with the EU which allows the UK to leave in good order and we now want to see this deal passed by Parliament,” Mr Barclay said.

“But, as a responsible government, we are preparing for all scenarios which is why, before Christmas, the Cabinet agreed to intensify our no-deal preparations.”

He added: “These preparations follow more than two years of extensive work to get the UK ready. Now, as 2019 begins, we will accelerate our no-deal planning further.”

Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, speaking in Singapore, said cancelling Brexit through a second EU referendum would have “devastating” social consequences, while a no-deal exit would cause economic disruption.

He predicted the Government would “find a way” of getting the 585-page withdrawal agreement approved by Parliament.

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