Mae defies her opponents over the "Brikst" plan ... and efforts to "overthrow" her


In a clear challenge to her opponents, British Prime Minister Teresa Mae has reiterated that she will not abandon her plan to withdraw from the European Union, which has sparked divisions in the government and prompted a number of ministers to resign, while senior Conservative officials seek to overthrow what is " , According to media reports.
"There is no alternative plan on the table, and there is no different approach that we can agree with the European Union," she said.

This came after reports that some senior members of her government want them to renegotiate the draft agreement, before meeting the leaders of the Union early next week.

"If parliamentarians refuse to agree, they simply bring us back to square 0. This will mean more division, more ambiguity and a failure to achieve the outcome of the British people's vote," she said.

Just hours after announcing on Wednesday that senior members of her government had collectively supported the withdrawal agreement, May faced the most serious crisis during her presidency of the government when the EU's withdrawal minister, Dominique Rap, resigned in protest at the draft agreement.

Other rebel MPs in her party have sought to publicly challenge her leadership and have explicitly told her that the draft agreement "will not get parliament's approval."

"They support May but are not entirely satisfied with the deal," Parliamentary Affairs Minister Andrea Ledsum told the BBC on Saturday.

Attempt to overthrow any of the leadership of "conservatives"
Several British newspapers said Ledesum was working with four other senior ministers and supporters of the EU pullout - Michael Goff, William Fox, Chris Grailing and Benny Mordonet - to persuade Mai to change the deal.

The New York Times reported that Murdon Warrap and five other senior members of the Conservative Party were former Foreign Minister Boris Johnson, David Davis, who succeeded Rapp, Interior Minister Sajid Javed, Foreign Minister Jeremy Hunt and Labor and Pensions Minister Amber Rudd. Effectively "campaigns for the leadership of the Conservative Party.

More than 20 deputies called on May's governors to resign, and 48 deputies must make such requests to start elections for leadership.

The Times also quoted an "unnamed army source" as saying orders had been issued to the British army to prepare contingency plans to help the police maintain public order in the event of a shortage of food and medicine after an agreement on withdrawal from the union European Union.