Daily Mail

CHEERS TO A GREAT BRITISH FUTURE!

... but on day one, EU’s already wailing about PM’s ‘blackmail’ in row over a new trade deal

- By Jason Groves Political Editor

THERESA May was accused last night of trying to blackmail the EU over a Brexit trade deal.

In a show of steel that angered Brussels, the Prime Minister suggested she could withdraw co-operation on security unless a fair agreement was struck.

She used her Article 50 letter, which launches a two-year divorce process, to warn the EU against trying to damage Britain at such a dangerous time. The 28-state bloc leans heavily on UK intelligen­ce and policing expertise.

Mrs May’s warning was described as tantamount to blackmail by Guy Verhofstad­t, the European Parliament’s Brexit negotiator.

EU leaders quickly said they would block Mrs May’s demand for a trade deal to be negotiated alongside the terms of Britain’s departure. ‘The

negotiatio­ns must first clarify how we will disentangl­e our interlinke­d relationsh­ip,’ said German chancellor Angela merkel.

‘only when this question is dealt with can we, hopefully soon after, begin talking about our future relationsh­ip.’

French president Francois Hollande said Brexit ‘would be painful for the British’. the security row came as:

mrs may said Brexit was ‘a historic moment with no turning back’;

Downing Street said the UK would leave the EU at midnight on march 29, 2019;

Jeremy corbyn warned Labour would vote against a bad Brexit deal;

the SNP said Scottish independen­ce was ‘inevitable’ unless the country could stay in the single market;

the Pm floated the idea of transition­al period to phase in immigratio­n and customs changes.

During a cagey interview with Andrew neil, the Prime minister refused to rule out making a divorce payment to the EU. She said the UK would stop making large annual payments to Brussels but told the BBC: ‘We’re a law-abiding nation, we will meet obligation­s that we have.’

Some ministers have warned the Pm that tory MPS would not accept a bill of more than £3billion. EU leaders have suggested a figure closer to £50billion.

In a commons performanc­e lasting more than three hours and 20 minutes, the Prime minister fielded questions from MPS and set out her vision for Brexit.

She pledged to forge a ‘stronger, fairer, more united’ country, take back control of the UK’s borders and strike an early agreement to guarantee the rights of 3.2million eU citizens living in this country and 1.2million British citizens in europe. ‘I choose to believe in Britain and that our best days are ahead,’ she said.

the Prime minister acknowledg­ed there would be consequenc­es for the UK in leaving the eU, with exporters forced to abide by rules that Britain no longer had a say in deciding. mrs may insisted she was willing to walk away from the negotiatio­ns if Brussels refused to play ball.

Downing Street denied that mrs may’s decision to raise the security issues was a threat, saying it was a ‘statement of fact’ that eU membership was the basis for substantia­l co-operation.

mrs may’s tough stance on security could see the UK withdraw co-operation on issues such as the sharing of DnA, vehicle registrati­on and fingerprin­ts, as well as the UK’s involvemen­t in the cross-border europol agency.

Former shadow home secretary Yvette cooper described the threat to withdraw security co-operation as an ‘act of selfharm’ and urged mrs may to rule it out.

mr Verhofstad­t said: ‘our security is far too important to start bargaining it against an economic agreement. I tried to be a gentleman towards a lady [mrs may] so I didn’t even use or think about the use of the word blackmail.’

mrs may defended her decision to switch from supporting Remain in the referendum to now championin­g Brexit, saying: ‘Well, I did campaign for Remain and I did vote to remain.

‘But I also said that I didn’t think the sky would fall in if we left the european Union, and it hasn’t.’

Former deputy prime minister Lord Heseltine described it as a ‘ very sad day’ and predicted pro-Remain forces could yet block Brexit if mrs may failed to secure a good deal.

‘I believe our best days are ahead’

 ??  ?? Union Jack socks: Nigel Farage in Westminste­r yesterday
Union Jack socks: Nigel Farage in Westminste­r yesterday
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