The Herald (South Africa)

Boris assaults May’s Brexit plan

● Former foreign minister calls her strategy dangerous in boisterous address at party conference

- Alice Ritchie

Britain’s Boris Johnson launched a blistering attack on Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit plan on Tuesday at a fractious party conference.

It came as Brussels pressed London for a compromise on leaving the European Union.

Mixing jokes with biting one-liners that always stopped short of attacking May herself, the former foreign minister called her strategy dangerous and unstable, as well as a political humiliatio­n.

“My fellow Conservati­ves, this is not democracy. This is not what we voted for. This is an outrage,” he said in a 35minute address that was interrupte­d by repeated bursts of laughter and cheers.

The wide-ranging speech, which many saw as Johnson’s audition for May’s job, was attended by about 1,500 people who packed a conference hall room after queueing for hours.

Johnson did little to douse suspicions of an eventual leadership bid, using his characteri­stic swagger and wit to pick apart the faults of May’s proposal – while not actually spelling out what Britain should do instead.

He said he wanted “to back Theresa May” by forcing her to reverse her attempts to keep close economic ties with the European Union once Britain leaves in March.

May appeared intent on stealing Johnson’s spotlight, scheduling a flurry of morning interviews at which she unveiled a new immigratio­n policy a day ahead of schedule.

Free movement of EU workers was a key issue in the 2016 vote for Brexit, and May confirmed that Europeans would be treated the same as non-EU citizens in future.

May’s public battle with Johnson comes only two weeks before she must return to Brussels in a bid to break the Brexit deadlock. The prime minister hinted at a possible compromise on how to keep the land border with Ireland open after Brexit, a key sticking point in the EU talks, on which London is due to publish new plans shortly.

Johnson was a leading campaigner for Brexit in the referendum.

Even after being appointed foreign minister, he continuall­y challenged May’s EU strategy.

He quit in July in protest at her plan for Britain to follow EU rules for goods after Brexit, which she says will protect cross-border trade but he argues would keep London tied to the bloc well into the future.

The EU has also rejected May’s vision, saying it undermines the bloc’s cherished single market.

Numerous euroscepti­c Conservati­ve MPs have already drawn big crowds in Birmingham as they offer their own idea for a looser trade arrangemen­t with the EU.

Johnson endorses the same alternativ­e proposal, but the former London mayor has particular star power.

He was mobbed by jostling cameras on arrival and chased by reporters as he walked, with his address airing live across the nation. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? BORIS JOHNSON
Picture: AFP BORIS JOHNSON

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