The Jerusalem Post

Cabinet minister: Britain has Brexit backup plan if talks fail

- • By WILLIAM JAMES

LONDON (Reuters) – Britain is drawing up contingenc­y plans for the unlikely event it has to walk away from divorce talks with the European Union without a deal, Brexit minister David Davis said on Sunday.

Prime Minister Theresa May is set to begin exit talks by the end of the month, kicking off Britain’s most complex set of negotiatio­ns since the end of World War II. The outcome will shape Britain’s political and economic future.

Ahead of the start of negotiatio­ns, which could be triggered as early as Tuesday, a committee of lawmakers warned it would be a serious derelictio­n of duty if the government failed to plan for the possibilit­y of not reaching an exit deal.

“I don’t think, firstly, that is remotely likely,” Davis, the secretary of state for exiting the European Union, told the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show, responding to the report. “It’s in absolutely everybody’s interest that we get a good outcome.”

Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee warned that a breakdown in negotiatio­ns would be a “very destructiv­e outcome,” causing economic harm to both sides as well as creating uncertaint­y and legal confusion for individual­s and businesses.

“The simple truth is we have been planning for the contingenc­y – all the various outcomes, all the possible outcomes of the negotiatio­ns,” Davis said.

“One of the reasons we don’t talk about the contingenc­y plan too much is that we don’t want people to think, ‘Oh, this is what we’re trying to do.’”

Asked when May would trigger talks, Davis declined to name a specific date. “Each date has different implicatio­ns in terms of when it could be responded to by the [European] Council... I’m not going to get into the details why, but there’s politics in terms of achieving success.”

Before May can begin negotiatio­ns, she must finish passing the legislatio­n that gives her the right to formally notify the EU of Britain’s intention to leave and start a two-year negotiatin­g period as set out in the EU’s Lisbon treaty.

The laws are expected to be finalized in a series of votes early next week, which will test May’s authority over her Conservati­ve Party as she seeks to overturn changes made to the draft bill by the House of Lords.

The government suffered two heavy defeats in Parliament during the legislativ­e process, inserting conditions into the bill saying May must guarantee the rights of EU nationals living in Britain and give lawmakers more powers to reject the final terms she reaches with the EU.

Facing a possible rebellion from Conservati­ves who want to vote on the final Brexit terms, Davis urged lawmakers to back May’s Brexit strategy and overturn those changes, because they would tie the government’s hands in the negotiatio­ns.

“What we can’t have is either house of Parliament reversing the decision of the British people – they haven’t got a veto,” Davis said.

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