Theresa May will step in front of MPs, reporting on her Brexit talks achievements, having faced harsh rhetoric and bitter bickering from hard-core Brexiteers within her party in the past few days.
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Eager to deliver a successful resolution to long-going negotiations with the European Union, the PM told the Parliament that "95% of the withdrawal agreement and its protocols were settled" in talks that she has until now largely insisted on keeping secret.
Mrs. May said that agreements on UK sovereign bases in Cyprus and Gibraltar have been struck.
"We have developed protocol relating to the UK sovereign base areas in Cyprus. Following discussions with Spain and in close cooperation with the government of Gibraltar, we have also developed a protocol and a set of underlying memoranda, relating to Gibraltar heralding a new era in our relations," she told the Parliament.
There was one real sticking point left, according to May.
"How do we guarantee that — in the unlikely event our future relationship is not in place by the end of the implementation period — there is not return to a hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland?"
Extension Period
Theresa May spoke about the extension of the Brexit "transitional period," which she said was "undesirable."
In essence, if implemented, the decision would see UK remain in the EU single market and customs union and subject to the bloc's rules as late as the end of 2021.
Mrs. May argued that there were limited circumstances "in which it could be argued that an extension to the implementation period might be preferable if we were certain it was only for a short time."
"If it at the end of 2020, our future relationship was not quite ready, the proposal is that the UK would be able to make a sovereign choice between the UK-wide customs backstop or a short extension of the implementation period," May told the MPs.
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'Very Real Sense'
According to the PM, who spoke to the press right after the talks in Brussels last week, she felt from EU leaders that "there was a very real sense" they wanted a deal to be done.
Theresa May's leadership is continued to be challenged, with the threat of a no confidence vote that could be triggered by the 1922 Committee of backbenchers, reportedly becoming very real. The Committee has received 46 letters of no confidence in Theresa May, with the threshold for calling a full no confidence vote standing at 48.
At the same time, the opposition will most likely vote down the deal brought home by the PM. Parliamentarians expressed their lack of confidence in the Conservative leader and support for a referendum on the final terms of any Brexit deal.
Thousands of protesters took to the streets of London over the weekend in support of the vote on the Brexit deal.
Writing in the Sun newspaper on Sunday, the PM promised to deliver a deal that's in the interests of the whole nation.
"As we enter the final, crucial phase of the talks there will undoubtedly be some unexpected challenges to which we must rise. But the finish line is in sight. And I am more determined than ever that we will get there together, with a Brexit deal that's right for you, right for your family and right for our country."