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The UK is set to leave the EU next Friday, on 29 March, unless the law is changed.

 

 

Theresa May has told the public she is "on their side", laying the blame for the delay to Brexit squarely with MPs.

 

Speaking from Downing Street, the prime minister said people were "tired of infighting and political games" and it was "high time" politicians made a decision on the next steps.

 

Earlier, Mrs May wrote to EU Council President Donald Tusk requesting to delay Brexit until 30 June.

 

Jeremy Corbyn said she was "in complete denial about the scale of the crisis".

 

Mrs May was forced to ask for a postponement after MPs twice rejected the withdrawal deal she has negotiated and also voted to reject a no-deal departure.

 

She said the delay was a "matter of great personal regret", but insisted she would not be willing to extend Brexit any further than 30 June - despite appeals from some MPs for a longer extension to give time for a change in direction.

 

 

The UK is set to leave the EU next Friday, on 29 March, unless the law is changed.

 

All other 27 EU members would have to agree any extension beyond that date.

 

Mr Tusk said he believed the EU would agree to a short extension, but only if Mrs May's deal is signed off by MPs next week at a third time of asking.

 

'Time to decide'

In her statement, Mrs May said: "Of this I am absolutely sure. You, the public, have had enough.

 

"You are tired of the infighting, tired of the political games and the arcane procedural rows, tired of MPs talking about nothing else but Brexit when you have real concerns about our children's schools, our National Health Service, knife crime.

 

"You want this stage of the Brexit process to be over and done with. I agree. I am on your side."

 

The PM said it was "now time for MPs to decide" whether they wanted to leave with her deal, no deal or whether they chose not to leave at all - the latter, she warned, could cause "irreparable damage to public trust" in politicians.

 

"So far Parliament has done everything possible to avoid making a choice," said Mrs May. "All MPs have been willing to say is what they do not want."

 

She made a final appeal to MPs to back her deal and told the public: "You just want us to get on with it and that is what I am determined to do."

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