Summary

  • Theresa May and Jeremy Corbyn have been on Sky News, with former Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab speaking to the BBC's Andrew Marr

  • Mrs May warns party rivals that replacing her won't make Brexit negotiations easier or "change the parliamentary arithmetic"

  • Labour leader Mr Corbyn says a further referendum is "an option for the future but not an option for today"

  • Publication of the draft withdrawal agreement led to the resignations of two senior ministers and several junior ministers and aides

  1. Javid and Hunt 'going nowhere'?published at 11:01 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

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  2. Ken Clarke talks of 'Brexiteer illusions'published at 11:00 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

    Brexit statement

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Kenneth ClarkeImage source, HoC

    Conservative pro-European Ken Clarke says "it has always been a Brexiteer illusion" that the UK can leave selective treaties "whilst selecting to retain all the benefits that we enjoy under the treaties" while ignoring "obligations".

    He asks if the prime minister agrees that many of the benefits from the UK come from the "completely open border" between the UK and EU. Which he says has supported investment and "many thousands of jobs".

    Mrs May says the proposal "is based on that concept of frictionless borders", she says that remaining in the single market and customs union would not "deliver on the vote of the British people".

    Remaining in the customs union does not let the UK have an independent trade policy, she states.

  3. Watch: 'I don't pretend it's been comfortable process'published at 10:59 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

    Theresa May begins her statement about the Brexit plan

  4. May: Labour plan 'would not deliver' on referendumpublished at 10:57 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

    Brexit statement

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Theresa MayImage source, HoC

    In her first response to Jeremy Corbyn, Theresa May says the government has been and is continuing to prepare for the possibility of a no-deal Brexit.

    She rejects his accusation that the agreement is "ill-defined".

    She says the prospect of a future UK-EU free trade deal is set out "very clearly" in the documents.

    She adds that Jeremy Corbyn wants to stay in the EU's customs union and single market, but this "would not deliver" on the referendum result from 2016.

  5. Mordaunt 'staring at phone'published at 10:56 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

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  6. First time for everything?published at 10:56 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

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  7. Conservative MP: Fair point from Corbyn?published at 10:56 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

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  8. Corbyn: 'Government must withdraw this half-baked deal'published at 10:55 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

    Brexit statement

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Leader of the Opposition Jeremy Corbyn says the Brexit secretary promised a "substantive document" and demands to know when the detailed framework will be put in front of MPs.

    "This is not the deal that the country was promised, and Parliament cannot, and I believe will not, accept a false choice between a bad deal and no deal," he adds.

    Jeremy Corbyn says "people are anxious this morning".

    "The government must withdraw this half-baked deal which does not have the backing of the cabinet, Parliament or the country as a whole."

  9. Draft agreement a 'substantial dilution' of May's commitments - Corbynpublished at 10:55 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

    Brexit statement

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Jeremy CorbynImage source, HoC

    Jeremy Corbyn asks the PM to confirm that if the government cannot agree a comprehensive relationship by January 2021, then negotiations will change back to extending the transition period.

    "The backstop locks Britain into a backstop from which it cannot leave without the agreement of the EU," he says, and no "guarantee exists for workers' rights".

    "The list of EU measures that continue to apply" runs to "68 pages of the agreement", he says.

    "It is utterly far-fetched for the prime minister to suggest that we have taken control of our laws, money and borders," he states.

    He calls the draft agreement a "substantial dilution" from May's previous commitments.

    "Uncertainty continues for business and all those who works in those businesses," he states, "many companies may decide the lack of certainty simply means they will Brexit".

    "There is no ambition to achieve continuation of the European arrest warrant," he adds.

  10. Corbyn: Withdrawal agreement does not meet our testspublished at 10:51 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

    Brexit statement

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Jeremy CorbynImage source, HoC

    In response, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn says the withdrawal agreement and political declaration represent a "huge and damaging failure".

    He says the government has negotiated a "botched deal" that breaches its own red lines.

    The withdrawal agreement, he says, "does not meet" Labour's six Brexit tests.

    The withdrawal deal is a "leap in the dark", but he tells MPs that leaving the EU without a deal is "not a real option".

  11. 'Calm and impressive performance'?published at 10:50 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

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  12. PM: MPs must 'think in the national interest'published at 10:49 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

    Brexit statement

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Theresa May says when a final deal is agreed she will bring it to Parliament and will ask MPs "to think in the national interest, give it their backing".

    She says "voting against would take us back to square one".

    Theresa May says the British people want MPs to "get on with other issues" such as creating jobs, helping families with the cost of living and providing a "brighter future for our country".

    She says "the choice is clear: choose to leave with no deal, risk no Brexit at all, or we can choose to unite and support the best deal that can be negotiated".

    "This deal ends free movement, takes back control of our borders, laws and money, and delivers an independent foreign and defence policy while continuing the security cooperation to keep our people safe."

    She says "this delivers the British people's wish."

    "I choose to do what's best in the interest of the British people."

  13. May: This deal 'is in the interest of the British people'published at 10:48 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

    Brexit statement

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Theresa May says the UK will be free to strike trade deals with other partners around the world.

    "This goes well beyond WTO commitments."

    The UK will be leaving the Common Agricultural Policy and will be a free coastal state once again, she says.

    The prime minister says there will be a "close and flexible" partnership with the EU on foreign and defence policy.

    "There was no ready-made blueprint for Brexit," she says.

    "I have been committed day and night to delivering Brexit, committing to the result of the referendum and making sure the UK leaves absolutely, and on time."

    "I always said it would be complex and hard work" and that "it has been a frustrating process", she adds.

    "A good Brexit in the national interest is possible."

  14. Watch: May defends planned Brexit dealpublished at 10:46 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

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  15. 'Very May-ish' statementpublished at 10:45 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

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  16. 'I have a responsibility to people in every part of our country' - Maypublished at 10:44 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

    Brexit statement

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Theresa MayImage source, HoC

    Theresa May says the EU will not negotiate any future partnership without a draft agreement on the divorce.

    There is a "new UK-wide temporary customs arrangement", as well as an option of a "time-limited implementation period" as an "alternative to the backstop".

    The agreement commits both parties to use "best endeavours to ensure that the insurance policy is never used", she adds.

    The agreement has ensured that Northern Ireland businesses will still get full access to the UK single market, she states.

    There are some who say she should "rip up" the commitment to the backstop but this, she says, would be "irresponsible".

    "I have a responsibility to people in every part of our country and I intend to honour that," she says.

    "The declaration will end free movement once and for all," which will mean a UK immigration system based on what people "can contribute to the UK", she adds.

  17. May: No deal available that does not include backstoppublished at 10:41 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

    Brexit statement

    House of Commons
    Parliament

    Theresa May, greeted by shouts of "resign" from some MPs, begins by saying that Brexit will involve "difficult choices".

    She tells MPs that the draft withdrawal agreement concluded yesterday is “not the final deal”, but a "draft treaty".

    She says the draft political declaration will lead to a more "ambitious" trade deal than the EU currently has with "any other country".

    She says she will "not pretend that this has been a "comfortable process", or that the UK or the EU is "entirely happy" with the backstop proposal for Northern Ireland.

    However she says there is no Brexit deal that delivers the Brexit "the British people voted for" that does not include this insurance policy.

  18. International reaction to Brexit planpublished at 10:41 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

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  19. Promotion for Prisons Minister?published at 10:40 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

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  20. What next for Penny Mordaunt?published at 10:39 Greenwich Mean Time 15 November 2018

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