Government ministers are preparing to launch No Deal exit plans on Monday if the EU27 reject a Brexit delay.

Ministers will be deciding in the next few days whether to launch the government’s national contingency plan “Operation Yellowhammer,” according to The Guardian.

Brexit secretary Stephen Barclay told ministers in a letter this week, “Operation Yellowhammer command and control structures will be enacted fully on 25 March unless a new exit date has been agreed between the UK and the EU.”

Tory Brexiteer Mark Francois said in the House of Commons on Wednesday, “It is now being widely reported on Twitter that President Macron is minded to veto any extension of article 50 at the Council tomorrow.

“Can [Brexit minister Chris Heaton-Harris] confirm that, should that occur, the Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union will initiate Operation ​Yellowhammer—the Government’s no-deal plan—on Monday?

“If that is so and there is no extension, why do we not just vote down the rancid withdrawal agreement and sprint for the line?”

No Deal, No Problem, Says OECD Boss: 'Whole World is Running by WTO Rules These Days' https://t.co/w30BkLF4qU — Breitbart London (@BreitbartLondon) January 23, 2019

Mr Heaton-Harris replied, “Leaving the European Union with a deal remains the government’s top priority, but a responsible government must plan for every eventuality including a no-deal scenario, and these preparations are taking place alongside work to deliver on the government’s policy priorities.”

The UK is due to leave the EU on March 29th — just over one week from today — and Mrs May has asked the European Council support a “short” extension to Article 50 to June 30th.

However, members of the EU27 Spain, Belgium, and France may veto the extension, with the European Council’s president Donald Tusk advising that an extension may only be possible if the House of Commons passes May’s Withdrawal Agreement — a deal parliamentarians have already rejected twice.

Named after a small, yellow, European songbird, Yellowhammer deals with the short-term impact of a clean Brexit covering 12 ‘areas of risk’ including UK citizens in the EU and the medicine and food supply chains.

May said 108 times the UK would leave the EU on March 29th… https://t.co/dUmhLITep2 — Breitbart London (@BreitbartLondon) March 20, 2019

Originally planned under Cabinet Office structures, they have now been taken over by Cobra, the government’s emergency committee, according to The Times. The Operation coordinates with 30 central government agencies; should any such department have failed to plan sufficiently for no-deal, Operation Yellowhammer will take over decision making.

Other contingency plans have already been launched, such as Operation Fennel for Kent’s traffic management of freight lorries heading to the port of Dover for shipping to Calais.

The French port’s chief Xavier Bertrand said in January that his region is ready for a clean Brexit telling media at the time, “Calais, Boulogne, Dunkirk, will be ready at the end of March. And you? Are you ready?”

After the House of Commons voted to rule out no deal and ask for a delay, Brussels’ chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier said on Tuesday, “Voting against no deal does not prevent it from happening.

“Everyone should now finalise preparations for a no-deal scenario.”