Theresa May narrowly survives no-confidence vote after Brexit plan is crushed

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By Saphora Smith

LONDON — Theresa May narrowly survived another bid to oust her as prime minister on Wednesday — the second attempt in five weeks — leaving Britain with a leader but without a plan as it barrels toward a March 29 deadline to leave the European Union.

Lawmakers rejected the no-confidence motion in May’s government, 325 to 306, just a day after her divorce proposal suffered the biggest parliamentary defeat of any prime minister in British history.

The twin votes leave the U.K. in its deepest political crisis in half a century as it grapples with how to exit the E.U.

May’s ruling Conservatives have 317 of the 650 seats in the House of Commons, meaning it needed the support of the Democratic Unionists, a small Northern Ireland party that has propped up her government, in the vote on Wednesday.

Moments after the razor-thin win, May pledged to bring fellow lawmakers on board to, once and for all, find an European exit plan.

“We have a responsibility to identify a way forward that can secure the backing of the House,” she told Parliament.

“I have proposed a series of meetings between senior parliamentarians and representatives of the government over the coming days,” May said.

The no-confidence vote on May’s government was different from a no-confidence vote she faced on Dec. 12, when Conservative colleagues challenged her role as party leader. She also survived that vote.

source: nbcnews.com