Author: Anthea » Wed Feb 01, 2017 11:01 pm
How MPs voted in the Article 50 debateMinisters were forced to bring forward the proposed legislation after the Supreme Court ruled that Parliament's approval is needed before the Brexit withdrawal process can beginAfter a heated two-day debate this was the vote that brought Brexit a step closer.
Proposals to allow Theresa May to start formal Brexit talks have passed their first Commons test following overwhelming support from MPs.
The European Union (Notification of Withdrawal) Bill passed a second reading by498 votes to 114
A majority of 384
The legislation allows the Prime Minister to decide when to trigger Article 50 and therefore begin the two-year process of negotiation on Britain's withdrawal from the EU.
A total of 47 Labour MPs defied orders from leader Jeremy Corbyn by voting against the Bill.
Mr Corbyn imposed a three-line whip on his MPs, which required them to support it.
An SNP-led wrecking amendment which attempted to stop the Bill from progressing was earlier defeated by 336 votes to 100, a majority of 236.
There were 33 Labour MPs who supported the SNP proposal, with six voting against, and 44 who opposed a motion outlining the future process for the Bill - which undergoes further scrutiny over three days from next Monday.
The votes came after more than 17 hours of debate.
Ministers were forced to bring forward the proposed legislation after the Supreme Court ruled that Parliament's approval is needed before the Brexit withdrawal process can begin.
The Government wants this to start before the end of March.
What was the vote about?MPs voted on the "second reading" of the European Union (Notification of Withdrawal) Bill on 1 February 2017.
This is where MPs vote for or against the general principle of a Bill.
It is not the final vote. That will be taken on 8 February after further scrutiny.
The Bill was introduced after the Supreme Court ruled MPs must vote on activating Article 50 - the trigger for Britain's two-year exit from the EU.
It is just two sentences long, and gives Theresa May authority to invoke Article 50
Link to Full Article:
http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/ ... t-12543325
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