Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May speaks in the House of Commons in London at the beginning of a debate on the Brexit withdrawal agreement, ahead of the ‘Meaningful Vote’. (HO/AFP/PRU) It marked a tumultuous start to a momentous week that will conclude next Tuesday with a vote on May’s plan for unwinding Britain’s 46-year participation in the grand European project. The House of Commons first voted 311-293 to censure the government for not publishing the full legal advice it received about May’s divorce deal with the European Union. May’s critics believe the attorney general’s report is full of embarrassing details about Britain being forced to follow EU rules for years to come while having no say in its decisions. The government argued that May had a right to get private counsel and refused to publish the entire text despite a resolution from parliament. The embarrassing loss saw it reverse course and promise to release the full tome on Wednesday. “This house has now spoken and it’s of huge constitutional and political signficance,” said opposition Labour Party member Keir Starmer. Lawmakers also backed an amendment that will give them a bigger say in what happens if May’s deal is voted down…