Malta Independent

Boris Johnson tells PM she is suffocatin­g Brexit ‘dream’

● Second resignatio­n to rock May’s government

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British Prime Minister Theresa May dug in her heels yesterday after the resignatio­n of two top government ministers over Brexit negotiatio­ns whipped up a storm that threatened to topple her fragile minority government

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson quit with a resignatio­n letter accusing May of flying “white flags” of surrender in negotiatio­ns with the European Union. He said “the Brexit dream is dying, suffocated by needless self doubt”.

Johnson followed Brexit Secretary David Davis out the door as a hard-won government consensus on future trade ties with the bloc disintegra­ted less than three days after it was forged, and nine months before Britain is due to leave the EU.

Davis resigned late Sunday, saying May’s plan to maintain close trade and regulatory ties with the EU gave “too much away, too easily.”

If Davis’s resignatio­n rattled May, Johnson’s shook the foundation­s of her government. The tousle-headed blond Johnson is one of Britain’s best-known politician­s, and one of the most prominent advocates for Brexit. Some euroskepti­c lawmakers dream of replacing May with a staunch Brexiteer such as Johnson, a populist, polarizing figure who has never made a secret of his ambition to be prime minister.

With Britain due to leave the currently 28-nation bloc on March 29, 2019, EU officials have warned Britain repeatedly that time is running out to seal a deal spelling out the terms of the divorce and a post-split relationsh­ip.

Minutes after Johnson quit, May defended her Brexit plan to lawmakers in the House of Commons, with Johnson absent from his usual place on the Conservati­ve front bench.

She said she and the two departed ministers “do not agree about the best way of delivering our shared commitment to honouring the result of the referendum” in which UK voters opted to leave the EU.

May’s plan seeks to keep the UK and the EU in a free-trade zone for goods, and commits Britain to maintainin­g the same rules as the bloc for goods and agricultur­al products.

May said the plan would deliver frictionle­ss trade with Europe and was the “only way to avoid a hard border” between the UK’s Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland. Britain and the EU agree there must be no tariffs and immigratio­n checks along the currently invisible frontier, but working out how to achieve that has been a major stumbling block in negotiatio­ns.

Rebuffing claims that her proposals make too many concession­s to the EU, May said her “smooth and orderly Brexit” would leave Britain free to make its own laws and trade deals.

The resignatio­ns came just days after May announced she had finally united her quarrelsom­e government behind a plan for a divorce deal with the EU.

Government unity began to fray within hours of Friday’s announceme­nt. Brexit-supporting lawmakers were angered by the proposals, saying they would keep Britain tethered to the bloc and unable to change its rules to strike new trade deals around the world. They also argued that the proposals breach several of the “red lines” the government had set out, including a commitment to leave the EU’s tariff-free customs union.

In his resignatio­n letter, Davis said the “’common rule book policy hands control of large swathes of our economy to the EU and is certainly not returning control of our laws in any real sense.”

Johnson said in his letter that May’s plan to keep close economic ties with the bloc means Britain is heading for a “semi Brexit” that would leave Britain with the “status of a colony” of the EU.

Britain and the EU hope to reach broad agreement by October so the national parliament­s of the remaining countries can ratify a deal before Britain leaves. The timetable increasing­ly looks overly optimistic, and EU frustratio­n with British division and chaos is growing.

European Council President Donald Tusk said Monday that “the mess caused by Brexit is the biggest problem in the history of EU-UK relations and it is still very far from being resolved.”

Opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said the government was incapable of delivering Brexit.

“How can anyone have faith in the prime minister getting a good deal with 27 European Union government­s when she can’t even broker a deal within her own Cabinet?” he asked.

May has hung on to power longer than many expected after she lost her majority in a June 2017 snap election that she had called in hopes of strengthen­ing her hand in Brexit talks.

The fear among May’s allies is that more resignatio­ns may follow. Steve Baker, a junior Brexit minister, resigned along with Davis. May appointed staunchly proBrexit lawmaker Dominic Raab as the country’s new Brexit secretary. She did not immediatel­y name a replacemen­t for Johnson.

The loss of two senior ministers and the anger among Brexit-supporting backbench lawmakers makes May’s position as leader increasing­ly tenuous.

Davis insisted he did not want his resignatio­n to become a rallying cry for May’s ouster.

“I like Theresa May, I think she’s a good prime minister,” Davis said.

But other pro-Brexit lawmakers were furious at what they saw as a sell-out of the clean Brexit they desire. Euroskepti­c Conservati­ve lawmaker Peter Bone said party activists felt “betrayed” by the government plan.

Under Conservati­ve Party rules, a confidence vote in a leader can be triggered if 48 Conservati­ve lawmakers write a letter requesting one.

May was asked by an opposition lawmaker Monday whether she would contest a vote of confidence rather than resign.

“Nice try,” she said with a touch of bravado. “But I’m getting on with delivering what the British people want.”

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