Britain’s work and pensions minister McVey quits over Brexit deal
“The deal you put before the Cabinet yesterday does not honour the result of the referendum”, McVey wrote in a letter to May,
joining Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab in quitting over May’s draft Brexit deal.
May gained collective but not unanimous approval for her Brexit plan from senior ministers on Wednesday, and McVey said
that the withdrawal agreement was not what Britons voted for when they chose to leave the EU in 2016.
“It will be no good trying to pretend to (Britons) that this deal honours the result of the referendum when it is obvious to
everyone it doesn’t,” she wrote.
“The proposals put before Cabinet, which will soon be judged by the entire country, means handing over around 39 billion
pounds to the EU without anything in return…
“We have gone from no deal is better than a bad deal, to any deal is better than no deal.”
The resignations of the senior ministers thrust the United Kingdom into a political crisis just as May was attempting to
garner support for a Brexit deal which her opponents have warned could sink her premiership.