May determined to leave EU in March

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May determined to leave EU in March
Theresa May has said she is "determined" to deliver Brexit on time, ahead of talks on the Irish backstop.Writing in the Sunday Telegraph, the prime minister said she would return to Brussels with a "fresh mandate, new ideas and a renewed determination".MPs have voted to seek an "alternative arrangement" to guarantee the Northern Ireland border stays open after Brexit.

But the Irish deputy prime minister has said "there are no credible alternative arrangements" to the proposal.Writing in the Sunday Times, Simon Coveney said: "The EU will not renegotiate the withdrawal agreement and there will be no withdrawal agreement without the backstop."Coveney said the backstop was required to "ensure the protection of the Good Friday Agreement" which ended 30 years of armed struggle in Northern Ireland.

The backstop forms part of the withdrawal agreement negotiated by the UK and EU and is aimed at keeping the border between Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic open after Brexit.The UK is due to leave the EU at 23:00 GMT on Friday 29 March, when the two-year time limit on withdrawal negotiations enforced by the Article 50 process expires.

Some MPs have suggested Britain will need more time to negotiate its exit to avoid crashing out of the EU without a deal.Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt conceded on Thursday that "extra time" might be needed to get "critical legislation" related to Brexit through Parliament.

But May has insisted the departure date will not change, writing in the Telegraph that she would "deliver Brexit on time".May said she rejected the suggestion "that seeking alternative arrangements for the backstop constituted 'ripping up the Good Friday Agreement'".

The prime minister added that MPs wanted the government to go back to Brussels to renegotiate the deal after the Commons voted in favor of Tory backbencher Sir Graham Brady's amendment on Tuesday that called for "alternative arrangements" to be found.May wrote: "While replacing the backstop with alternative arrangements was one option, [Sir Graham] would also be happy with the current backstop if there was a time limit or unilateral exit mechanism."

But Coveney said no alternatives have been put forward "that achieve the shared goal of the UK and EU to avoid a hard border", and the backstop was a "necessary guarantee".Our political correspondent Chris Mason said that while May pledged to "go back to Brussels to secure a plan that Parliament can stand behind", the EU remains publicly opposed to changing the backstop.

And our correspondent added that the UK has not yet publicly suggested an alternative Brussels could live with.After the Commons voted on the Brady amendment, the EU's chief negotiator Michael Barnier said the backstop is "part and parcel" of the UK's Brexit deal and will not be renegotiated.In January, MPs rejected May's withdrawal agreement by 432 votes to 202, with nearly 120 Conservative MPs voting against their leader.
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