Khaleej Times

Fox, Hammond fight over free labour movement after Brexit

-

london — The British government appeared divided on Sunday over Brexit, with Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liam Fox clashing with finance minister Philip Hammond over free movement of labour once the UK leaves the EU.

Fox said the cabinet had not agreed a deal on immigratio­n once Britain is out of the European Union in March 2019.

With Prime Minister Theresa May out of the country on holiday, Hammond said there was “broad acceptance” in cabinet of a postBrexit transition­al period, extending current freedom of movement arrangemen­ts for up to three years.

But Fox told The Sunday Times newspaper: “If there have been discussion­s on that I have not been party to them. I have not been involved in any discussion­s on that, nor have I signified my agreement to anything like that.”

In the June 2016 referendum vote to leave the EU, “We made it clear that control of our own borders was one of the elements we wanted in the referendum, and unregulate­d free movement would seem to me not to keep faith with that decision,” said Fox. David Jones, a former junior minister in the Brexit department, branded Hammond’s transition plans “deeply dangerous”.

He accused the finance minister of “going on manoeuvres” while May was on holiday in Italy.

“All this agitation by the chancellor and his allies is hugely discourteo­us to her and undermines her authority,” Jones said in The Mail On Sunday newspaper. Meanwhile, Gerard Lyons, who was an economic adviser to Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson when he was London mayor, said a two-year transition period would work better. He said Hammond’s alarmism reminded him of the year 2000 when a feared “Millennium bug” was meant to make computer systems crash.

“Many of the ‘risks’ being highlighte­d about Brexit are perceived risks, not real risks. And a two-year transition would alleviate many concerns,” he wrote in The Sunday Telegraph newspaper.— AFP

 ?? Reuters ?? Philip Hammond. —
Reuters Philip Hammond. —
 ?? Reuters ?? Liam Fox. —
Reuters Liam Fox. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates