No-deal exit would be ‘betrayal’
LONDON: A no-deal Brexit would betray Britain’s decision to leave the European Union, former finance minister Philip Hammond said yesterday, as he slammed Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s “wrecking” approach to negotiations.
Mr Hammond, who quit as chancellor just hours before Mr Johnson took over from Theresa May on July 24, said there was no popular or parliamentary mandate for a no-deal Brexit, saying most people wanted an orderly exit from the EU.
“No-deal would be a betrayal of the 2016 referendum result. It must not happen,” he wrote in The Times newspaper.
He said it could turn Britain into “a diminished and inward-looking little England”.
The British parliament three times rejected the withdrawal agreement Ms May negotiated with Brussels, with many MPs troubled by the “backstop” — a mechanism that would keep the UK in EU customs arrangements to prevent a hard border on the island of Ireland. Mr Hammond said the shift of position from seeking changes to the backstop to demanding its removal “is a pivot from a tough negotiating stance to a wrecking one”, setting an impossibly high bar.
Mr Hammond said a no-deal Brexit would also threaten the United Kingdom’s integrity as it risked collapsing the peace accords in Northern Ireland and triggering a referendum on the province leaving the UK.
It would also lead to a second secession referendum in Scotland and the likely break-up of the UK, Mr Hammond claimed.