Ex-UK PM May won't back Johnson bill

Jill LawlessAAPCamera IconEx-UK PM Theresa May says the Internal Market Bill threatens to do "untold damage" t

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Jill LawlessAAP
Ex-UK PM Theresa May says the Internal Market Bill threatens to do "untold damage" to the country.
Camera IconEx-UK PM Theresa May says the Internal Market Bill threatens to do "untold damage" to the country.

The British government has won over some domestic opponents of its plan to breach part of the Brexit divorce deal it agreed upon with the European Union but not former prime minister Theresa May, who warned that the move would do "untold damage" to the UK.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Conservative administration has sparked anger from the EU and unease from many UK MPs with legislation that gives his government the power to override part of the legally binding Brexit withdrawal agreement relating to Northern Ireland.

The government says the Internal Market Bill is an insurance policy to guarantee goods can flow freely to all parts of the UK in case Britain and the EU fail to reach a trade agreement and the bloc tries to disrupt trade between Northern Ireland and the rest of the country.

On Monday, the British government agreed to amend the bill to give MPs a vote before the override powers can be used.

That was enough for some Conservatives who had previously opposed the bill but said they would now vote for it.

But May, who was the country's Conservative prime minister between 2016 and 2019, said the government was acting "recklessly and irresponsibly, with no thought for the long-term impact on the standing of the United Kingdom in the world".

May struck a divorce deal with the EU in 2018 after two years of painstaking negotiations.

She resigned last year after repeatedly failing to get parliament to approve it.

"This is a country that upholds the rule of law," she said.

"It is one of the things that makes us great. It is one of our characteristics. Yet we're being asked to tear up that principle and throw away that value."

Johnson's government hopes to shepherd the bill through parliament and into law in the coming weeks.

The EU says it will take legal action if the UK does not drop the provisions by the end of September.

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