Theresa May is facing unprecedented pressure to announce a resignation date – even by her standards.
The beleaguered PM who not long ago fought an election with the slogan “strong and stable” has been significantly weakened now the government has admitted it may not be try to push her Brexit deal through the House of Commons next week after all.
The government is looking unlikely to command a majority of MPs if such a vote was forced on MPs a third time despite the objections of Speaker of the House John Bercow.
The Times today reports that senior figures in No 10 confirmed discussions are underway on a timetable for the prime minister to stand down.
A Downing Street source told the newspaper that even her closest allies believe it is now inevitable Theresa May has to resign. “It’s obvious that this is where things are headed,” they told The Times.
The Prime Minister has been further undermined by her acting deputy, David Lidington holding talks with opposition leaders yesterday about a series of indicative votes on alternatives to her Brexit deal to find a way through the impasse more likely to work than repeatedly voting on the PM’s deal.
This has angered Brexiteers worried about parliament now debating and deciding on the best way through the Brexit crisis so that Britain does not crash out of the EU unprepared for the chaos of a no deal Brexit.
Support for the Prime Minister from her Conservative colleagues both remain-suppporting and the ERG faction who want a harder Brexit has fallen off significantly since she blamed MPs for the present crisis.
In an inflammatory address from Downing Street on Wednesday the PM blamed MPs for the failure of Brexit.
But the tactic appears to have backfired. Soon after a Sky poll showed that 90% of the country find the Brexit negotiations a “national humiliation” and MPs warned that such remarks endangered them and the democratic institutions of the country.
One MP was attacked in the street by a Brexiteer calling him a traitor and another was told by police not to go home after death threats.
Labour backbencher Wes Streeting warned May could have blood on her hands. He stormed: “Theresa May knows that MPs across the House are subjected to death threats – some very credible.
“Her speech was incendiary and irresponsible.
“If any harm comes to us, she will have to accept her share of responsibility.”
Anne Marie Trevelyan and Tracey Crouch are among a “large number” of Tory backbenchers who told whips May “had to go” now.
Ex-Minister Guto Bebb panned her incendiary speech an “utter failure of judgement”.
Many Tory colleagues now will only vote with the PM if she commits to resigning and other Tory rebels who switched to backing the EU Withdrawal deal last week are now threatening to vote against Theresa May.
Nigel Evans, secretary of the Tory 1922 Committee insisted that May would have to go if the UK signed up to an extension that forced the UK to hold European Elections – another of her red lines she vowed not to cross.
Theresa May also appears to have lost the support of the DUP’s MPs that she needs to win any vote.
James McGrory, the Director of the People’s Vote campaign, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “Politicians are unable to agree on a way forward so it seems to the People’s Vote campaign that the only way forward it to put any Brexit deal – whether it’s the government’s deal or any alternative form of Brexit – put it to the people.”
29 March: Current Brexit date under UK law
12 April: If MPs do not approve the current withdrawal deal next week – “all options will remain open” until this date. The UK must propose some way forward before this date for consideration by EU leaders
22 May: If MPs would approve the government’s current EU withdrawal deal next week, Brexit will be delayed until this date
23-26 May: European Parliamentary elections are held across member states. The EU says it is prepared for a longer delay for Brexit if Britain takes part in the elections like the other EU states