UK - The morning after the night before was shaping up to be a rough one for British Prime Minister Theresa May. On Wednesday night, she won her cabinet's backing for her draft proposal on how the UK should pull out of the European Union. On Thursday morning, May's Brexit secretary, the man who led her negotiating team in Brussels to hammer out that draft, quit. He said he could not "in good conscience support the terms" of the deal he helped to craft. Dominic Raab, the second of May's Brexit secretaries to quit the role in as many years, said the draft agreement reached with Brussels would effectively leave Britain beholden to the rules and regulations of the European Union and even give the EU the power to stop the UK from extricating itself down the road.