Business Standard

IN ELECTION PITCH, UK PM BACKS HIS DEAL OVER NO-DEAL BREXIT

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British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has put his Brexit withdrawal deal at the centre of his election campaign, rejecting an electoral pact with the Brexit Party that would mean he’d have to embrace leaving the European Union without a deal.

Johnson had previously pledged to take Britain out of the European Union with or without a deal on October 31, before lawmakers voted to force him to seek an extension until January 31.

But he has abandoned the threat of a no-deal Brexit in his Conservati­ve Party’s manifesto for the December 12 election, the Times newspaper reported on Saturday. It added that the focus would be on getting his Brexit deal approved.

On Friday, Johnson rejected a call from the Brexit Party to drop the deal he negotiated with the European Union last month in order to form a new electoral pact, saying that he could put his deal through parliament after any election win.

“What we’ve got is a fantastic deal that nobody thought we could get,” Johnson said. “As soon as we get back in the middle of December, we can put that deal through.” Nicky Morgan, the culture minister who is standing down as a lawmaker, said a vote for the Conservati­ves would be a vote against no deal. “If you vote Conservati­ve at this election, you’re voting to leave with this deal, and no-deal has been effectivel­y been taken off the table,” she told the Times in an interview.

In Britain’s tortuous road since a 2016 referendum vote to leave the EU, businesses and economists have cautioned that leaving the bloc without a deal to smooth the transition would deliver a big blow to the British economy. Proponents of a nodeal Brexit say it provides a clean break from EU rules and regulation­s.

The Conservati­ve manifesto will also not include a commitment to a fiscal rule, the Times reported, relaxing the government’s grip on public finances. The Conservati­ve party did not respond to a request for comment. The government’s previous fiscal rule pledged to hold the underlying budget deficit below 2 per cent of the country’s economic output in the 2020/21 financial year.

Opinion polls give Johnson a sizeable lead over the opposition Labour Party, but also suggest that more than 10 per cent of voters back the Brexit Party.

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 ?? REUTERS ?? Boris Johnson had previously pledged to take Britain out of the European Union with or without a deal on October 31
REUTERS Boris Johnson had previously pledged to take Britain out of the European Union with or without a deal on October 31

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