Bangkok Post

No-deal exit would be ‘betrayal’

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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.

 ?? AP ?? Philip Hammond in London.
AP Philip Hammond in London.

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