British Prime Minister Teresa Mae's adherence to the EU's Brikst agreement and its signature with union leaders without the consensual support of her ruling Conservative Party have exposed her to a no-confidence crisis for her leadership of the party, thereby jeopardizing her government position. At the same time, The EU confirmed its leaders that there is no return to negotiations, and that they have nothing to do with what is going on inside Britain.

Mae took office after the United Kingdom voted in favor of leaving the EU in 2016, faced criticism from within her party over her exit plan with the union, and lost the confidence of her party's deputies after a parliamentary vote on the deal, scheduled for Monday, was postponed.

May has attributed the reason for postponing the vote on the agreement in the British parliament, to the deep divisions among the deputies who threatened to reject the agreement, explaining that it had asked her government to accelerate preparations in anticipation of exit from the European Union without agreement, pointing out that it heard the concerns expressed , And is ready to discuss it with its European counterparts on the eve of the Brussels summit tomorrow and tomorrow.

A vote of no-confidence was reached after 15 percent of conservative deputies submitted written letters calling for a vote of no-confidence on May to the head of a party committee known as the 1922 Committee, which represents deputies who do not hold government posts.

The Conservative Party has 315 deputies in the British Parliament, so 48 MPs have to make such speeches until the vote is held.

When former Prime Minister David Cameron decided to step down, and from the Conservatives' leadership after the referendum on the exit from the European Union in 2016, five candidates submitted to the competition. The competition was then confined to May and then state minister Andrea Ledesom, who withdrew before the party's vote, Free for Mai to take over the leadership of the party.

"I will fight this vote with all I have," she said in a speech to 10 Downing Street, her residence and office.

She added that any change in party or national leadership would "waste the Brikst agreement now in our hands", pointing out that this also creates "a state of uncertainty we can not afford at the moment, wasting weeks in tearing ourselves, which will only lead to more Division, "he said.

In response to a question about whether she could rule out a second referendum on Precast, May said: "I think we should respect the referendum that was held in May. In 2016 ».

The European leaders said they would not renegotiate the withdrawal agreement and would at best explain the agreement to help pass it through parliament.

Before the vote on no-confidence vote on May, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said he was "shocked" by the British prime minister's inability to obtain parliament's approval of the EU exit agreement. To provide further clarification to Britain on the exit agreement, but will not renegotiate its treaty or protocol on the Irish border, adding: "There is no room for renegotiation."

France's European Affairs Minister Nathalie Loisau said the agreement reached with Britain for Britain's exit from the European Union was "the only possible agreement" and the EU should "prepare for Brixt without agreement."

The statements by European officials coincided with remarks by senior British Conservative member Steve Baker that "May should leave now" and urged the rest of the party's members to vote for a vote of no confidence.

"What I want today is for the Conservative members of parliament to realize that we can no longer go on with this stumbling block, and I regret to suggest a vote of no confidence," Baker said yesterday.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said yesterday that she does not expect the EU summit to decide to change the exit agreement again, and stressed that this is the general position of all EU member states.