Zurie
JF-Expert Member
- Jul 6, 2014
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The British Parliament has passed a bill that will allow Prime Minister Theresa May to start talks to leave the European Union.
The Queen will now sign it into law, clearing the way for May to trigger Article 50, beginning the process by which Britain will give up its EU membership.
May could begin the process as early as Tuesday, but it's expected to be postponed until the end of the month to avoid a clash with Dutch elections on Wednesday.
The First Minister of Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon, also threw the timetable into question earlier Monday by saying she'd ask the Scottish Parliament next week to grant her the power to call a new independence referendum -- a move Downing Street said would be "divisive."
The prospect of an independence vote, which could potentially end Scotland's 310-year-old link to Great Britain, would add further uncertainty as May embarks on formal Brexit talks.
Amendment dumped
Monday's approval came after a back and forth in which the House of Commons rejected changes to the bill and then sent it back to the upper chamber for them to vote again.
The House of Lords voted not to insist on its original amendments giving protections to EU citizens in a post-Brexit Britain and called for a "meaningful vote" on any divorce deal.
Speaking in Edinburgh, Sturgeon said it was clear the United Kingdom was heading for a "bad deal" on Brexit.
She said May had failed to engage with her call for Scotland to remain in the European single market after Brexit, and that Scotland risked being taken out of the EU against its will.
In the Brexit referendum, Scotland bucked the UK trend and voted 62% to 38% to remain in the European Union. Sturgeon said it was for Scots to decide whether they followed the rest of the United Kingdom or forged their own path.
"I am ensuring that Scotland's future ... will be decided by the people of Scotland," she told reporters at Bute House, the official residence of the Scottish first minister.
"It will be Scotland's choice and I trust the people of Scotland to make that choice."
The Queen will now sign it into law, clearing the way for May to trigger Article 50, beginning the process by which Britain will give up its EU membership.
May could begin the process as early as Tuesday, but it's expected to be postponed until the end of the month to avoid a clash with Dutch elections on Wednesday.
The First Minister of Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon, also threw the timetable into question earlier Monday by saying she'd ask the Scottish Parliament next week to grant her the power to call a new independence referendum -- a move Downing Street said would be "divisive."
The prospect of an independence vote, which could potentially end Scotland's 310-year-old link to Great Britain, would add further uncertainty as May embarks on formal Brexit talks.
Amendment dumped
Monday's approval came after a back and forth in which the House of Commons rejected changes to the bill and then sent it back to the upper chamber for them to vote again.
The House of Lords voted not to insist on its original amendments giving protections to EU citizens in a post-Brexit Britain and called for a "meaningful vote" on any divorce deal.
Speaking in Edinburgh, Sturgeon said it was clear the United Kingdom was heading for a "bad deal" on Brexit.
She said May had failed to engage with her call for Scotland to remain in the European single market after Brexit, and that Scotland risked being taken out of the EU against its will.
In the Brexit referendum, Scotland bucked the UK trend and voted 62% to 38% to remain in the European Union. Sturgeon said it was for Scots to decide whether they followed the rest of the United Kingdom or forged their own path.
"I am ensuring that Scotland's future ... will be decided by the people of Scotland," she told reporters at Bute House, the official residence of the Scottish first minister.
"It will be Scotland's choice and I trust the people of Scotland to make that choice."