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  • Spain threatens to vote No on Brexit deal over Gibraltar

    Spanish Prime Minister Sanchez said that Madrid cannot approve the deal unless changes regarding Gibraltar are made. All 27 remaining EU leaders must approve the 585-page exit.

    The government of Spain said on Tuesday that it would vote to reject the EU's draft Brexit agreement. Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said he would only alter his vote if certain amendments were made regarding the future of the Gibraltar peninsula.

    "As of today, if there are no changes with respect to Gibraltar, Spain will vote no to the agreement on Brexit," said Sanchez during a conference in Madrid.

    The tiny British overseas territory is adjacent to the Spanish mainland, and has long been a point of contention between the UK and Spain.

    Despite Spanish claims of sovereignty, residents have rejected the idea of co-rule between London and Madrid twice, in a referendum in 1967 and again in 2002.

    Although 96 percent of Gibraltarians voted to remain in the EU during the Brexit referendum, it is set to leave the bloc when the UK does in 2019.

    Prime Minister Sanchez says any deal Spain agrees to must include clear language that states Gibraltar's future is a bilateral issue between London and Madrid, not something to be negotiated at the EU level.

    Spain is the only one of the 27 EU countries to voice opposition to the 585-page draft Brexit deal so far.

    British Prime Minister Theresa May is also facing opposition to her deal at home, from within her own party and from Northern Ireland's ten DUP lawmakers who provide her with her majority in the House of Commons.