The Star Malaysia

‘Trust me on Brexit’

British PM Theresa May insists she can be trusted to deliver a good deal as she tries to mend government rifts over the best way forward.

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London: British Prime Minister Theresa May insists that she can be trusted to deliver a good Brexit deal as she tries to mend government rifts over the best way forward.

May’s Conservati­ve administra­tion is divided on what sort of customs agreement Britain should have with the European Union after it leaves the bloc.

The splits were laid bare last week when Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson dismissed as “crazy” one of May’s proposals for future EU customs arrangemen­ts.

But the Prime Minister insisted that “You can trust me to deliver”, as she attempted to ease the tensions.

“The path I am setting out is the path to deliver the Brexit people voted for,” she wrote in The Sunday Times newspaper yesterday.

“Of course, the details are incredibly complex and, as in any negotiatio­n, there will have to be compromise­s.

“I will need your help and support to get there. And in return, my pledge to you is simple: I will not let you down.”

May said she had proposed different options for a new customs arrangemen­t with the EU and that the government would keep working on them during the negotiatio­ns.

She said her mission in the talks was to build a new, close trading relationsh­ip with the EU, put Britain in full control over its immigratio­n policy and taxpayer spending and build closer ties with the world’s emerging economies.

She said any deal must protect the United Kingdom’s constituti­onal and economic integrity, and honour the Northern Irish peace accords.

“This means there can be no hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland, or between Northern Ireland and the rest of the United Kingdom.

“Any agreements must create as little friction as possible for trade,” May said, adding: “We must not constrain our ability to negotiate trade agreements with other countries around the world by being bound into a customs union.”

Last year, London put forward two options to ease cross-border trade with the EU but, with Brexit looming, has still yet to make a final decision on which to pursue.

May’s preferred option, the customs partnershi­p, was reportedly rejected at a meeting of her senior ministers last week, while Brussels has also condemned it as “magical thinking”.

The model would involve Britain collecting EU tariffs on goods heading into the bloc, but charging its own on UK-destined products.

A second option, “maximum facilitati­on”, would involve using technology to minimise customs checks, but the EU has also cast doubt on its viability.

A decision is not expected for at least another week, but the clock is ticking ahead of a crucial EU summit next month.

The Sunday Times said May’s article was “an appeal for unity as she enters another perilous phase of her premiershi­p”.

Yesterday, the main opposition Labour Party called for parliament to be given the chance to vote on a customs union.

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