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SNP MP: Revoking Article 50 is ‘inevitable’ to avoid no-deal Brexit

SNP MP Joanna Cherry in the House of Commons - Credit: PA Wire/PA Images

The SNP MP behind a revised plan to revoke Article 50 if a no-deal scenario says it seems inevitable, and believes the plan has the support of many Labour MPs.

Joanna Cherry QC said she has been working closely with some Labour politicians to find a more ‘palatable’ way of wording the proposal.

Scottish Labour MP Paul Sweeney has suggested that he and others are ‘sympathetic’ to the idea, which he described as a ‘sensible safeguard’.

MPs are preparing to take control of the House of Commons timetable with a second series of ‘indicative’ votes on Brexit, starting on Monday, in a bid to find a plan which can command a majority in the House.

Cherry has confirmed that she has tabled a fresh version of her motion that calls for Article 50 – the mechanism for leaving the European Union – to be revoked in certain circumstances.

Under the reworked motion, if the UK gets to April 10, the date of a European Council summit, without a deal, an extension to Article 50 will be sought.

If that extension is not granted, the UK government would then be mandated to put a vote on no deal before the Commons.

Cherry told BBC Scotland: ‘We’re confident that that will be defeated, and the motion goes on to say that if the vote for no deal is defeated, the Government must revoke Article 50.’

The reworked version also provides for a public inquiry to be set up within three months of revocation to look at Britain’s future relationship with the EU and whether a majority can get behind it.

Speaking on the Sunday Politics Scotland programme, she said: ‘I’ve worked very closely with some Labour MPs who didn’t feel able to support the way it was worded last time to craft it into a form that’s more palatable for them.’

The MP continued: ‘I don’t know if Labour are going to whip for it yet, but I have been proactively approached by many Labour MPs who didn’t vote for it last time who want to support it this time round.’

Asked whether Labour as a whole could support the plan put forward by Cherry, Sweeney responded: ‘Well we’re sympathetic to it, but we’ll see what happens next week.

‘I think it’s certainly a very sensible safeguard.’

Last week the MP appeared to swear about the Labour Party as her proposal failed to win enough support in the House of Commons.

Twitter users rallied behind the SNP MP for muttering ‘f**king Labour’ in response to the defeat.

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