Irish Daily Mail

BREXITEERS OUT OF THE TRAPS EARLY TO RUBBISH AGREEMENT

- By John Stevens

HARDLINE Brexiteers lined up last night to tear into Theresa May’s withdrawal agreement – before it had even been shown to her cabinet.

Minutes after an RTÉ reporter tweeted that a Brexit deal had been reached in Brussels, critics put into action their bid to kill it off.

Conservati­ve MPs and the DUP immediatel­y threatened to vote it down and warned the British prime minister that her days were numbered.

In an unpreceden­ted joint press conference, prominent figures including Jacob ReesMogg, Boris Johnson and DUP Westminste­r leader Nigel Dodds paraded in front of television cameras to voice their anger.

Despite the details of the agreement still being under wraps, the Brexiteers said that reports on what was being proposed to avoid a hard border in Ireland were unacceptab­le. They called on the British cabinet to rise up to oppose it.

However, Mrs May’s opponents faced a backlash over their attempt to destroy her deal without even having seen or scrutinise­d it. Tory MP Jonathan Djanogly tweeted: ‘How come all these Brexiteers are throwing their toys out of the pram before we know the deal terms? Could it be that they always intended us to jump naked off the cliff whatever the terms!’

Other Tories pleaded for restraint and for people to reserve judgment until they had read the 500-page text, rather than reacting to ‘speculatio­n’.

Former foreign secretary Mr Johnson led the onslaught against the deal, claiming it was ‘vassal state stuff ’, urging Mrs May’s cabinet to ‘chuck it out’ and saying he would definitely vote against it. He told the BBC: ‘For the first time in a thousand years, this place, this parliament, will not have a say over the laws that govern this country. It is a quite incredible state of affairs.

‘For the first time since partition, Dublin – under these proposals – would have more say in some aspects of the government of Northern Ireland than London. I don’t see how you can support it from a democratic point of view, I don’t see how unionists can support it, and I don’t see how you can support it if you believe in the economic and political freedom of this country.’

He claimed the deal was ‘making a nonsense of Brexit, so I hope the cabinet will do the right thing and I hope they chuck it out’.

Jacob Rees-Mogg, the leader of the pro-Brexit European Research Group of Tory MPs, said the reported agreement was a betrayal of Mrs May’s promise to maintain the

‘White flags have gone up’

integrity of the UK.

‘White flags have gone up all over Whitehall. It is a betrayal of the Union,’ he said.

‘If what we have heard is true, this fails to meet the Conservati­ve Party manifesto and it fails to meet many of the commitment­s that the prime minister makes. It would keep us in the Customs Union and de facto the Single Market. This is the vassal state.

‘It is a failure of the government’s negotiatin­g position, it is a failure to deliver on Brexit and it is potentiall­y dividing up the United Kingdom.’

He said it is ‘very hard’ to see any reason why the British cabinet ‘should support Northern Ireland being ruled from Dublin’. He added: ‘The backstop doesn’t allow us to leave the Customs Union without the permission of the EU, so it’s just a lesser ability to leave under these arrangemen­ts than we currently have. That doesn’t seem to me to be wise. I hope the cabinet will block it and I hope parliament will block it. I think we know that this deal is deeply unsatisfac­tory.’

Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith suggested the time may have come for Mrs May to be replaced. Asked if there would now be a new party leader, he replied: ‘The party will certainly be asking questions along those lines.’

Mr Duncan Smith added that he had no expectatio­ns that any ministers would resign over the deal, saying: ‘I never expect anything.

‘As [Margaret] Thatcher once said to a friend of mine – but it may apply to the cabinet – “your spine does not yet meet your brain”.’

Asked if the Tory government’s days were numbered, he said: ‘They are in real trouble if they bring back something that is unacceptab­le to the party. They are trying to promote something they themselves said they would never promote.’

Mr Dodds said the deal would leave the North ‘subject to the rules and laws set in Brussels with no democratic input or any say’.

Former Brexit secretary David Davis, who also resigned from Mrs May’s cabinet, said: ‘This is the moment of truth.

‘Cabinet and all Conservati­ve MPs should stand up, be counted and say no to this capitulati­on.’

 ??  ?? ‘Discourteo­us’: Rees Mogg
‘Discourteo­us’: Rees Mogg

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