Daily Mail

... and if that’s not enough, Boris sticks his oar in yet again

- By Political Editor

BORIS Johnson reopened Cabinet divisions over Brexit last night by setting out a series of red lines for negotiatio­ns with the EU.

Reigniting speculatio­n about his leadership ambitions, the Foreign Secretary said he was not prepared to stay shackled to the EU for ‘a second longer’ once a two-year transition is complete in March 2021.

Remainers in the Cabinet, including Chancellor Philip Hammond and Business Secretary Greg Clarke, are pushing for a transition of up to three years, fuelling suspicions the UK might never leave.

Theresa May fudged the issue in her Florence speech this month, saying that a transition would be ‘about two years’.

But, in an interview with The Sun on the eve of the Tories’ annual conference in Manchester, Mr Johnson made it clear he would accept no further compromise­s on the issue. He said Brexit voters were feeling betrayed, adding: ‘I got that from my own talking to people. Very strongly.

‘What that teaches me is that really is it. Rien ne va plus. Finito la musica. Then we come out. There can be no monkeying around. Am I impatient about it, do I want to get it done as fast as possible? Yes, absolutely. Do I want the delay to go on longer than two years? Not a second more.’

Mr Johnson angered No 10 this month when he set out his manifesto for Brexit in an unauthoris­ed essay running to more than 4,000 words, just days before the PM set out her own vision.

The subsequent row, in which Home Secretary Amber Rudd branded him a ‘ backseat driver’, led to speculatio­n he might quit.

His latest interventi­on will revive fears in No 10 that Mr Johnson may storm out of the Government and position himself as a ‘Brexit martyr’. Last night the Foreign Secretary also set down a series of other conditions for the talks with Brussels. He said Britain must accept no new EU rules during the transition – which puts him at odds with Mr Hammond, who believes the UK will have to concede continuing regulation­s from Brussels during this period.

And he said the UK must padlock itself to the single market after it finally leaves and refuse to accept any demands for payment in return for access to it.

‘We will pay for things that are reasonable, scientific pro - grammes,’ he said. ‘But when it comes to paying for access to the market, that won’t happen any more than we would expect them to pay us for access to our market.’ He added: ‘There is no point in coming out of the EU and then remaining in rotational orbit around it. That is the worst of both worlds. You have to be able to have control of your regulatory framework.’

Meanwhile, Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson took a swipe at Mr Johnson as she called for ‘serious people’ to take charge of Brexit. The prominent figure in the Remain campaign criticised party figures who were ‘over-optimistic’ about Brexit, saying it ‘sells people short’. She told The Times that the complexity of talks ‘is not something you can just skip over’.

Miss Davidson, tipped as a potential Tory leader, has clashed repeatedly with Mr Johnson in the past. Asked about his Brexit essay and upbeat message, she said: ‘This needs serious people to do a lot of legwork and scanning the detail to make sure we do get to a place where it will all be okay.’ But Mr Johnson said it was right to stress the positives about Brexit. ‘We need to believe in ourselves and believe we can do it,’ he said. ‘Ain’t no stopping us now. There is a disjunctur­e between the debate in Westminste­r and the London bubble and where a lot of people are in the country.

‘Most people can’t understand what this conversati­on is all about. We left. We voted for that last year — so let’s get on with it.’

‘No monkeying around’

 ??  ?? No compromise­s: Boris Johnson says Brexit voters feel betrayed
No compromise­s: Boris Johnson says Brexit voters feel betrayed

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