Gulf News

UK’s Johnson seeks to allay Brexit fears

USES LONDON SPEECH TO REASSURE BRITONS WHO WANTED TO STAY

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Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson yesterday called for Britain to completely throw off EU rules and to view Brexit as an opportunit­y, while refusing to deny he might quit if the government chose a different path.

Johnson, a leading campaigner behind Britain’s vote to leave the European Union, used a speech in London to try to reassure the millions of Britons who wanted to stay by offering a positive vision of Brexit.

He said the project’s success “will depend on what we make of it” — and said it would be “absurd” if Britain left the bloc only to align itself with all its rules in future, without having any say in them.

“We would be mad to go through this process of extricatio­n from the EU and not to take advantage of the economic freedom it will bring,” he said in a highly-anticipate­d speech at a think tank in London.

“In a global marketplac­e … it seems extraordin­ary that the UK should remain lashed to the minute prescripti­ons of a regional trade bloc comprising only six per cent of humanity,” he added.

His call for a clean break with Brussels puts Johnson at odds with other members of Prime Minister Theresa May’s cabinet, not least her finance minister Philip Hammond, who wants Britain’s economy to diverge only “modestly” from the EU.

Johnson dodged a question about whether he might resign if he disagrees with any deal struck with Brussels later this year, saying only: “We’re all lucky to serve.”

His speech was the first of series of high-profile ministeria­l addresses on Brexit, as May’s divided government prepares for crucial talks with Brussels on the future trading relationsh­ip starting from April.s

Challenge to May

Johnson, viewed as a potential successor to May, has challenged her authority over Brexit several times, and admitted Wednesday that he risked causing some “irritation” with his latest speech.

But said he felt the need to “reach out to those who still have anxieties” about the 2016 vote to end four decades of EU membership.

He stressed that Britain had not turned in on itself, saying with typical flourish: “It’s not some great V-sign from the cliffs of Dover.”

He said the vote was driven by a “legitimate and natural desire for self-government”, which was at odds with what he said was the EU’s main goal of creating “an overarchin­g European state”.

Johnson’s comments prompted a swift response from European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker, who said the idea of a European superstate was “total nonsense”.

He also risked antagonisi­ng some of those he aimed to reassure by falling back on phrases used by the antiBrexit side, saying that trying to stop the process would “frustrate the will of the people” and lead to “ineradicab­le feelings of betrayal”.

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