As a result of several pressures
put on the British Prime Minister, within and outside her party, she has
finally decided to make a noteworthy address on Brexit on Tuesday, Downing
Street has affirmed.
The Prime Minister has been under
weight to set out the Government's methodology before the activating of Article
50 by the end of March and beginning formal EU exit negotiations.
UK’s Foreign Secretary Boris
Johnson and Brexit Secretary David Davis have been included in drawing up the details
of the discourse.
Members of the opposition parties
trust it will end vulnerability about how the Government will lead leave
transactions with the European Union.
A representative for the Prime
Minister said her speech will set out "more on our approach to
Brexit" and will be "in line with our approach of a global Britain
and continuing to be an outward looking nation".
At the end of the week, she told
Sky News that her Government is not experiencing "muddled thingking"
over Brexit. During her reaction to feedback from Sir Ivan Rogers, who
surrendered as Britain's minister to the EU.
In her first TV meeting of the
year, Mrs May stated: "I'm ambitious for what we can get for the UK in
terms of our relationship with the European Union because I also think that's
going to be good for the European Union.
"Our thinking on this isn't
muddled at all. Yes, we have been taking time. I said we wouldn't trigger
Article 50 immediately, some said we should."
She additionally gave her most
grounded insight yet that the UK will leave the single market when she said
Britain couldn't cling to "bits of EU participation".
Addressing Sophy Ridge on Sunday,
the PM likewise said she doesn't see the decision between trade and migration
amid Brexit talks "as a binary issue".
Mrs May stated: "I'm
ambitious for what we can get for the UK in terms of our relationship with the
European Union because I also think that's going to be good for the European
Union.
"Our thinking on this isn't
muddled at all. Yes, we have been taking time. I said we wouldn't trigger
Article 50 immediately, some said we should."
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