Malta Independent

Hard Brexit ‘could cost Conservati­ves next election’ MPs

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Pursuing a “hard” Brexit could alienate core Conservati­ve voters and cost the party the next general election, a group of Tory MPs has warned.

The group - which includes ex-attorney general Dominic Grieve said “a moderate core” of Tory voters do not want the party to become “UKIP-lite”.

PM Theresa May must ensure she is not “pushed” into a hard Brexit, they said.

It comes as the Lib Dems overturned a 23,015 Conservati­ve majority to win Thursday’s Richmond Park by-election.

Ex-Tory MP Zac Goldsmith stood as an independen­t after leaving the Conservati­ve Party, but Lib Dem Sarah Olney - who fought the campaign on the issue of Brexit - won by more than 1,800 votes.

Writing in the Observer newspaper, Mr Grieve, former Foreign Office minister Alistair Burt, ex-transport minister Claire Perry, education select committee chairman Neil Carmichael, and Bath MP Ben Howlett, said the Richmond Park result must serve as a wake-up call for the party.

“The Conservati­ve Party needs to be alert that there is a moderate core of Conservati­ve voters, who voted Remain, and who want to hear the Conservati­ve government speaking above the noise of the Brexiters,” the quintet wrote.

“They do not want the Conservati­ve party to be UKIP-lite, nor to hear that their desire for a negotiated Brexit, with all options open for the prime minister, is an attempt to delay the process or simply an expression of Remoaning.”

The Richmond Park result should be a reminder “that their votes have another destinatio­n if we don’t get this right,” they added.

They called for Downing Street to reveal its negotiatin­g position on Brexit before triggering the formal exit process under Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty.

Such a move would ensure the government was not “pushed into a corner by those who only advocate a hard Brexit,” the MPs added.

So far the government has refused to reveal what it will seek to achieve in negotiatio­ns with the EU, once formal talks begin.

However, the Sunday Times says Mrs May has given ministers the green light to draw up secret plans for a “grey Brexit” that would steer away from the demands of Leave and Remain hardliners.

The paper quoted Whitehall sources as saying that Chancellor Philip Hammond and Brexit Secretary David Davis had formed a “small clique” with No 10 to drive Britain away from a hard exit.

On Friday, internatio­nal trade minister Greg Hands suggested the UK could seek a deal which would allow sections of the economy to remain within the EU’s customs union after Brexit.

Mr Hands said officials would be able to choose the type of products to be covered by agreements.

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