Al Jazeera Net - London

The political divorce between Britain and the European Union has entered another phase of uncertainty after British Prime Minister Theresa May announced the postponement of the House of Commons vote on the withdrawal agreement from the Union known as the Breakest, where she faces great pressure from her party and almost certain expectations that the Council has rejected its plan to choose the latter Buy more time and request additional collateral from Europeans.


The European Court of Justice, the highest court in the European Union, said Monday that the British government could make a unilateral decision to withdraw from the EU without consulting or agreeing with other member states.

The court ruled in an emergency one day ahead of the British parliament's scheduled vote on Tuesday. "The United Kingdom has the freedom to unilaterally defer to a formal notification to the European Union of its intention to withdraw from it," the court said.

5976438888001 83935faf-f9af-4d44-b87c-520f3402320d cb68c4f1-7e5a-4f1f-a45d-9df22595220e
video

Observers believe that the timing of the decision of the European Court suggests that the Europeans want to give the British to turn their decision to come out in light of the growing voices calling for the implementation of a second referendum and the renewal of the demonstrations led by rejecters exit from the European club.

The hardline
In conjunction with the chaos and chaos that has begun to cloud the political atmosphere in the United Kingdom in the absence of a clear project of the hard-line movement wishing to get out of the European Union strengthens the decision of the European Court of the hopes of opponents of Britain's withdrawal to hold a new referendum prevents the planned departure of their country from the bloc on March 29 March 2019.

The political editor of the Times, Oliver Wright, picked up the court's decision and said it meant that at any time until 11 pm on March 29, 2019, London had to cancel the bricast by sending an official letter to the European Commission informing it of its decision to cancel Article 50.

But the British journalist does not think Teresa Mae is capable of going for this option, while another new leader of the party can then take the step and then be able to temporarily cancel the bricassate to gain time to negotiate again.

"He will not change the game right now, but the referee has the ability to become very important as the process comes to an end," Wright commented.

Analysts say vote on the bricast by default could blow the political future of Teresa May (Getty Images)

Option to return
On the expected scenarios, the academic and political science professor Ahmed Ajaj told Al Jazeera.net that if the agreement is rejected by a majority of 100 deputies, the prime minister will be lost and then she will have two choices either to resign or to be forced by her party to resign, indicating that Mai will benefit from the postponement in order to return to EU structures to obtain new concessions.

Ajaj does not rule out the possibility of returning to the people to see his opinion. If the prime minister does not reach a deal with Europe by the 21st of next month, it will come out of her hands and the parliament will be responsible for managing the negotiations.

The pressure on the prime minister is great, and she may be forced to resign, especially since the opposition Labor Party "is trying to prevent an exit without an agreement and is trying to discredit the prime minister, not her government. This opens the door to a new Conservative president, patriotism".

Set of benchmarks
The political crisis and divisions in the May government can be demonstrated by the struggle for leadership within its party and by the recent series of resignations that followed its announcement of its exit plan from the European Union. The prime minister also received 48 letters from her party members with their comments on her plan a day before the vote.

The former British Foreign Secretary, Boris Johnson, is trying to put himself at the head of the replacement set for May if he resigns or is sacked. The man has already drawn up plans for further negotiations with Brussels. Former ministers have also rejected the decision, Others exclude themselves from competition.

With the complexity of the political scene, the vote increased to call for a second referendum on exit from or staying in the European Union. A poll conducted by the center of the "Yu Jouf" last week showed that 49% believe that Britain was wrong in voting to exit the European Union, compared with 38% the correct.

This 11-point gap reflects the shift in British public opinion, which is becoming increasingly concerned about the right to exit the EU.