Belfast Telegraph

Chequers plan is only alternativ­e to no-deal Brexit,saysLiding­ton

- BY JENNIFER MCKIERNAN

IT is Chequers or no deal on Brexit, de facto deputy prime minister David Lidington has told a French business conference.

Speaking to France’s largest employer federation, the Mouvement des Entreprise­s de France, Mr Lidington set out how the UK was trying to reach a pragmatic solution.

But the Cabinet Office Minister (inset) said in his keynote speech that the European Commission’s proposal remained unacceptab­le.

He said: “With exactly seven months until the end of the Article 50 process and less than two months ahead of the October European Council, we face the choice between the pragmatic proposals we are discussing now with the European Commission or no deal.

“The alternativ­e models do not meet the level of ambition or the outcome we all want to see delivered.

“So we need the EU to engage with us on our positive vision of the future relationsh­ip.”

Mr Lidington appealed for compromise from the EU side on the basis of co-operation over trade.

“The mercantili­st system of rivalry and conflict that once characteri­sed relationsh­ips in Europe is long in the past,” he said.

“Trade liberalisa­tion has been key to the peace, stability and prosperity that we have enjoyed in Western Europe in recent decades. It is an agenda we have worked together to promote.

“It is through this system that France continues to enjoy a big trade surplus in goods with the UK — in fact, it is currently France’s biggest trade surplus with any EU country, in the region of six billion euros.”

Stressing the historic ties between France and the UK, Mr Lidington said the countries must also pull together “because the foundation­s of the world order that we forged in the aftermath of war are creaking”.

“I believe that this is a time when Europe, Europe inside the EU and Europe outside the EU, needs to pull together to embrace the spirit of unity and co-operation that has been the cause of our success for more than half a century.

“Even in Europe, dark political forces, long banished to the very fringes of society and the ashes of history, are re-emerging — feeding on resentment over inequality, stalling standards of living and rapid social change.”

He said the government had been “clear” on its ambition for a future relationsh­ip. “We want a deep and special partnershi­p with the EU, we remain a proud European nation committed to European values, European security and European trade.”

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