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by Kevin Schofield
17 January 2019
MPs reject motion of no confidence in the UK Government

Theresa May and Arlene Foster - PA

MPs reject motion of no confidence in the UK Government

Jeremy Corbyn has failed in his attempt to trigger a general election after MPs voted against Labour's motion of no confidence in the Government.

Following six hours of debate, MPs backed Theresa May's beleaguered administration by 325 votes to 306.

Tory backbenchers and the DUP rallied round the Prime Minister just 24 hours after the Commons inflicted a record-breaking 230-vote defeat on the Government's flagship Brexit blueprint.

May said she will now set up talks with senior politicians in a bid to find a way through the Commons impasse and get her deal through Parliament.

Kicking off the debate, Corbyn had called on MPs to reject Mrs May's "zombie government" and give voters a fresh say on who should run the country.

He said: "The Prime Minister has consistently claimed that her deal, which has been decisively rejected, was good for Britain workers and business… she should have nothing to fear by going to the people."

Deputy Labour leader Tom Watson said: "The country feels genuinely sorry for the Prime Minister, but she cannot confuse pity for political legitimacy, sympathy for political support."

In a barnstorming speech, Labour MP Wes Streeting said life for ordinary people had got worse since the Conservatives first came to power nine years ago.

He said: "Nine years on, it is now the experience of people who use and rely on our public services that things are demonstrably worse now than they were."

May said a general election at the moment was the worst possible option facing the country.

She said: "Should the next step be a general election? I believe that is the worst thing we could do. It would deepen division when we need unity. It would bring chaos when we need certainty. And it would bring delay when we need to move forward. 

"I believe this House should reject this motion. At this crucial moment in our nation's history, a general election is simply not in the national interest."

Nigel Dodds, deputy leader of the DUP, who May relies on to prop up her government, said he was backing the Government despite their differences over Brexit.

"We believe it is in the national interest to support the Government at this time so the aims and objectives of the confidence and supply agreement we entered into can be achieved," he said.

"I don't think the people in this country would rejoice at the prospect tonight if a general election were to be called. I am not convinced a general election would significantly change the composition of the House. 

"And of course it doesn't change, whatever the outcome, the choices that lie before us all."

And former Labour MP John Woodcock, a long-standing critic of Corbyn who quit the party last year, said that with "a heavy heart" he could not support the confidence motion.

He said the Labour leader and Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell were "unfit for high office".

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