Brexit: Theresa vows to stand down if deal is passed

Theresa May has promised Tory MPs she will quit if they back her Brexit deal.

She told backbench Tories: “I am prepared to leave this job earlier than I intended in order to do what is right for our country and our party.”

The PM said she knew that Tory MPs did not want her to lead the next phase of Brexit negotiations “and I won’t stand in the way of that”.

Boris Johnson has said he will now back the prime minister’s deal, the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg said.

But the Democratic Unionist Party said they would not be dropping their opposition to it, party sources told the BBC’s Northern Ireland political editor Mark Devenport.

“Prime ministers come and go” but the trade and constitutional issues affected by Mrs May’s withdrawal agreement would “live on”, DUP sources said.

And MP Steve Baker told a meeting of the European Research Group of Brexiteer Tories, after Mrs May’s statement, that he was “consumed with a ferocious rage after that pantomime”.

Sources said Mr Baker attacked those in the party whose “addiction to power without responsibility” had led them to confront MPs with a choice between the PM’s deal and no Brexit and that he “may yet resign the whip” than “be part of this”.

But Justice Secretary David Gauke said he hoped Parliament would now “rally behind” the PM’s deal, and he thinks “there is a mood in that direction”.

Mrs May did not name a departure date at a packed meeting of the 1922 committee of backbench Conservative MPs.

But if the deal is passed, she would resign as party leader after 22 May – the new Brexit date – but stay on as PM until a new leader is elected.

Downing Street said it would be a “different ball game” if the deal was not passed by Parliament.

It comes as MPs seize control of the Commons agenda to hold votes on alternatives to the deal.

If the deal doesn’t go through then it’s not quite clear that Mrs May’s offer to go still applies, although it is almost impossible, whether it stands or falls, that she would be able to stay.

The prime minister hopes that by offering to leave Number 10, she’ll take the country out of the EU with her, smoothly, without more political turmoil.

And that order, of a sort, will be restored and the uncertainty for all of us will end.

If that happens, we’ll see a new leader in Downing Street by mid-July.

But that is still a gamble.

Mrs May told the 300 or so Tory MPs at the meeting “we need to get the deal through and deliver Brexit”.

“I ask everyone in this room to back the deal so we can complete our historic duty – to deliver on the decision of the British people and leave the European Union with a smooth and orderly exit.”

The BBC’s Iain Watson said a very senior Conservative had said the PM was “as clear as she has ever been” that she will not be around for the next stage of Brexit but if the deal does not pass then “that’s a different matter”.

Iain Watson said Mr Johnson – who is likely to be a leadership contender – was smiling as he left the meeting.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn tweeted that Mrs May’s announcement “shows once and for all that her chaotic Brexit negotiations have been about party management, not principles or the public interest”.

He added: “A change of government can’t be a Tory stitch-up, the people must decide.”

George Freeman, the prime minister’s former policy adviser, said she had done the “right thing” in announcing her decision to stand down, even though it had been a “sad moment”.

The Tory MP told BBC News her speech had been followed by a series of interventions from “very hardline Brexiteers” all saying “prime minister, thank you, I will now vote for this deal”.

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