Oman Daily Observer

May hit by resignatio­ns over Brexit

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LONDON: Business leaders expressed alarm on Thursday as a draft Brexit agreement seen as the only chance of preserving some stability in UK-EU trading relations threatened to unravel, sending stock prices and the pound plunging.

Just 12 hours after British Prime Minister Theresa May announced that her cabinet had agreed to the terms of the draft agreement, Brexit minister Dominic Raab and work and pensions minister Esther Mcvey quit, saying they could not support it.

Their departures and those of other, junior ministers, revived the spectre for business of Britain leaving the European Union without a deal next March, and sent shares in British housebuild­ers, retailers and banks tumbling.

“The situation this morning saps the confidence of the City and the country,” said Martin Sorrell, EX-CEO and founder of ad agency group WPP and one of Britain’s best-known businessme­n.

The European Union is Britain’s biggest trading partner, accounting for 44 per cent of UK exports and 53 per cent of imports to the UK.

After 45 years of membership, industries including defence, cars and aerospace have created intricate supply chains that rely on smooth, “just-in-time” delivery of thousands of parts across the sea that divides Britain from the continent.

Business leaders fear that the country could stumble towards a nodeal Brexit where border checks block ports and fracture the supply chains that support the likes of Rolls-royce and BAE Systems. A senior executive at one of Britain’s biggest banks said this was the most disastrous government he had ever seen.

 ?? — Reuters ?? British fishermen stage a protest against Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal.
— Reuters British fishermen stage a protest against Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal.

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