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How your MP is planning to vote on Theresa May's Brexit deal

The majority of West Midlands MPs are set to oppose Theresa May's Brexit deal when it goes before the Commons tonight.

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How will your MP vote in the House of Commons?

The Prime Minister's agreement with the EU could spark the biggest Government defeat in almost a century, with more than 100 MPs expected to vote in down.

Mrs May cancelled the vote on her deal before Christmas in a bid to boost support for her deal after continued negotiations with the EU.

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However, MPs opposed to the deal say that little has changed, prompting Government ministers including International Trade Secretary Liam Fox to admit it has little chance of gaining Commons support.

Should the deal fail, Mrs May will have three days to consider her next move, while Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is likely to push for a confidence vote in the Government in the hope of securing a General Election.

Labour outlook

Seven of the eight Labour MPs in the Black Country appear certain to vote against the deal, along with Tory Brexiteers.

John Spellar, the Labour MP for Warley, said the majority of constituents he had been in contact with on both sides of the Brexit debate were against Mrs May's agreement.

"She has shown herself to be incapable of sorting out this crisis," he said.

"We are still going to be tied to Brussels, but with no sensible relationship that benefits Britain.

"She has got herself completely embroiled in the Irish border, instead of focusing on what should be the main issue: the mutual benefit of trade with the EU."

Tom Watson, Labour's deputy leader

Labour deputy leader and West Bromwich East MP Tom Watson is also against the deal.

He said: "We could have built a Brexit that respected the referendum result, protected jobs and business through a customs union, defended workers' rights and maintained environmental protections.

"Instead we are being offered a Tory version of Brexit that doesn't even command the support of the party who wrote it."

Labour's Wolverhampton South West MP Eleanor Smith said that since Mrs May pulled the vote before Christmas, "nothing has changed".

"I cannot support the Withdrawal Agreement and the political declaration of the future relationship with the EU because this deal doesn’t protect workers rights or Trade Union legislation," she added.

Valerie Vaz

Walsall South MP Valerie Vaz is against the deal, and warned that the Government’s decision to delay the meaningful vote had "run down the clock and increased the risk of a no-deal Brexit".

Ian Austin is the region's only Labour MP – and one of few in the country – who has called for his party to consider backing the deal.

The Dudley North MP, who represents one of the biggest Leave voting areas in the country, said: “My constituents voted to leave. They expect us to sort this out and we need to think carefully before rejecting it."

Wolverhampton North East MP Emma Reynolds, Wolverhampton South East MP Pat McFadden and West Bromwich West Adrian Bailey have all stated their intention to vote against the deal.

Tory view

Hardline Tory Brexiteers including Michael Fabricant and Sir Bill Cash have made their views on the deal crystal clear, and both of them will be voting against it.

Lichfield MP Mr Fabricant said: "This Brexit deal would dash my dream of a global Britain. That's why I cannot vote for it."

Stone MP Sir Bill described the deal as "a highly organised attempt to keep us in the European Union."

Walsall North MP Eddie Hughes

For Conservative Brexiteers Mike Wood and Eddie Hughes, any chance of the Prime Minister's deal gaining their support is dependent on the success of two amendments, which could be voted on today providing they are called by Speaker John Bercow.

Both MPs want to see legally abiding assurances over the Irish backstop provisions, but as things stand, they could resign their junior ministerial positions and vote against the agreement.

Walsall North MP Mr Hughes said: "I've still got grave concerns about the backstop and the fact that it will trap us in the EU, taking rules but with no say in those rules."

Jeremy Lefroy supports the deal

A number of Tory MPs across the region have vowed to vote in favour of the deal.

Stafford MP Jeremy Lefroy said the deal provided for "an orderly exit from the EU, with a transition period for the detailed negotiations and preparation for the close, vital and wide-ranging new relationship which we will have with our neighbours and largest trading partner."

James Morris, the MP for Halesowen and Rowley Regis, said the deal "delivers on the result of the referendum and also provides the certainty business needs to continue to trade and invest".

Aldridge-Brownhills MP Wendy Morton pledged to "honour the referendum and support the Prime Minister" by backing the deal, while her Conservative colleagues Amanda Milling, Gavin Williamson and Mark Garnier will also vote for it.