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Theresa May wants to speed up the process of Brexit before the end of March
British Prime Minister Theresa May will go ahead with plans to exit Great Britain from the European Union despite the Supreme Court decision obliging the government to seek Parliament's consent to trigger Article 50 of the Treaty of Lisbon.
Moreover, chances are that Article 50 be triggered before the end of March, as prime minister wants Theresa May, writes Reuters in an analysis published Tuesday.
Even if the judges of the highest judicial authorities in the UK have decided that Parliament must give its consent on the start of negotiations for Brexit, this will not lead to major delays as they would like some investors or supporters of the EU. The reason is that the opposition is divided in Britain.
"We will not block Article 50," said Jeremy Corbin last week Labour leader who campaigned against Brexitului. "Labour-all Members will be asked to vote that way next week, or ever will be held this vote," he said.
Not all colleagues of Corbyn will vote as he says, but May could get the votes it needs. But what could facilitate the Supreme Court decision is to be avoided a tough Brexit, who eventually immigration restrictions over access to the single market. In this way members of Parliament will have more control over the negotiation process and the final agreement.
Conservative cabinet ministers of May that they expected to lose the already came with options, including a short legislative proposal that could be immediately sent House of Commons.
Although the referendum before June vast majority of lawmakers in the lower house they wanted Britain to remain in the EU, most especially those in England and Wales now say they will vote for starting negotiations.
Lawmakers held a non-binding vote in May's proposal in December 2016 to start negotiations before the beginning of April.
Labour, however, have a problem with their electorate, especially working-class format, which voted to leave the EU and was attracted by eurosceptic parties in recent years.
Although not block Brexit, Corbyn, himself a critic of the EU for many years, he said that Britain will fight to have access to the free market, respecting reasonable condition management of migration.
Labour might seek legislative amendment to any project using several conservatives who oppose tough Brexit and other smaller parties such as the Scottish Nationalists and Liberal Democrats.
The biggest threat comes from the upper house of Parliament, the House of Lords, where most lawmakers oppose Brexitului and not dependent on the electorate.
If the House of Lords vote against triggering negotiations, the Government plans to Brexit May could be affected drastically.
But May is confident that Parliament will be the government that the House of Lords would risk triggering a constitutional crisis on the grounds that unelected members of a House of Parliament would veto the will of voters expressed through referendum.