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Theresa May's plan for Brexit vote in early June greeted with skepticism

Brexit-supporting rebels in British Prime Minister Theresa May's party say they would vote down her European Union divorce deal when she brings it back to Parliament early next month.

Parliament voted down 3 separate attempts to pass Brexit bill, most recently in March

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May is shown outside 10 Downing Street early Wednesday. Later in the day at a conference in Paris, she declined to answer when asked if she'd resign if the House of Commons failed to pass a Brexit bill a fourth time. (Alastair Grant/Associated Press)

Brexit-supporting rebels in British Prime Minister Theresa May's party said Wednesday they would vote down her European Union divorce deal when she brings it back to Parliament early next month.

May will bring a Withdrawal Agreement Bill, which implements the departure terms, in the week beginning June 3 — the same date that U.S. President Donald Trump begins a state visit to Britain at the invitation of Queen Elizabeth.

Brexit supporters in May's divided Conservative party said her deal was as dead as her crisis-riven three-year premiership.

"I have talked to colleagues, some of whom voted for it last time, and they think it is dead and they will vote against it this time," Peter Bone, a Conservative lawmaker and a prominent supporter of leaving the EU, told Talk Radio.

"I know they wouldn't vote for it. It seems absurd to bring it back. It is the same thing again, again and again."

May, who secured the Conservative Party leadership and the premiership in the chaos that followed the 2016 Brexit referendum, is already under pressure from some of her own lawmakers to set a date for her departure.

Defeat in the June vote would likely spell the end of her divorce deal and her premiership.

Brexit supporters fear that May's deal will keep the United Kingdom trapped within the EU's orbit for years and that it could ultimately pull the British province of Northern Ireland towards the bloc.

May said Wednesday she was confident lawmakers would want to deliver Brexit when legislation comes before Parliament again.

"I'm sure that when MPs come to look at that and they come to vote for that, they will recognize that we have a duty in Parliament to deliver on the result of the referendum and deliver Brexit," she told reporters in Paris, where she had been meeting other leaders to discuss online extremism.

May declined to answer directly when asked if she would resign if lawmakers fail to support the bill.

Earlier in the protracted process, May said she would resign once Brexit was delivered.

Irish backstop remains vexing

Nearly three years after the United Kingdom voted 52 per cent to 48 per cent to leave the EU, politicians still disagree about when, how or even if the divorce will take place.

Before her deal was defeated the last time, 344-286 on March 29, May had promised to resign if it was passed. It was voted down first in January and again in mid-March.

A constant sticking point has been the Irish backstop, an insurance policy aimed at avoiding post-Brexit controls on the border between Northern Ireland and EU state Ireland.

"If the prime minister brings the withdrawal bill to the Commons for a vote, the question will be 'what has changed?'" said Nigel Dodds, parliamentary leader of the Northern Irish Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), which props up May's minority government in a confidence-and-supply arrangement.

"Unless she can demonstrate something new that addresses the problem of the backstop then it is highly likely her deal will go down to defeat once again," Dodds said.

A majority of members of the European Research Group, a large Brexit-supporting faction in the Conservative Party, will vote against May's deal, said Owen Paterson, a former minister.

"Sadly, we will vote against it again," he said, adding that it could divide the country.

As positions harden in Parliament, with many wanting to either leave the EU without a deal or to stop Brexit altogether, May has turned to the opposition Labour Party, led by veteran socialist Jeremy Corbyn, to negotiate a way out of the impasse.

But after more than four weeks of talks, the two party leaders appear no closer to agreeing a common position.

"We haven't seen the significant shift yet that we require to be able to support a deal," Labour's second most powerful man, finance chief John McDonnell, said on Tuesday. "We are not near what we want."

McDonnell said he was deeply concerned a future Conservative leader could renege on any promises made by the current government.