Britain will not seek further talks with the European Union if Parliament rejects the exit deal it reaches, the Government said yesterday, as ministers defeated attempts to give lawmakers more say on the terms of the final agreement.
The statement, which echoes Prime Minister Theresa May's stance that "no deal for Britain is better than a bad deal for Britain" came as Parliament debated a law that would give her the power to begin exit negotiations with the EU.
Last month, May promised to ask Parliament to approve the final exit terms in 2019, but said that even if it rejected the deal, Britain would leave the EU.
That has raised concern among some lawmakers that their vote would be purely symbolic and they would be unable to force May back to the EU negotiating table to avoid a so-called "hard Brexit".
Asked whether the Government would reopen negotiations if Parliament rejected the deal, junior Brexit minister David Jones said: "I can't think of a greater signal of weakness than for this House to send the Government back to the European Union and to say we want to negotiate further ... therefore I can't agree with it."