Daily Mail

BRUSSELS CAN’T BEAR TO SEE US SUCCEED

- By Iain Duncan Smith

At the EU referendum almost two years ago, the British people heroically saw through Project Fear. In their determinat­ion to embrace national independen­ce, they refused to be intimidate­d by the deceitful scaremonge­ring about our supposedly apocalypti­c future after Brexit.

Yet the Establishm­ent has never accepted the democratic verdict of the electorate. Unable to imagine life without the EU’s rule, devoid of any real faith in Britain’s capabiliti­es, key elements of the political class have embarked on a systematic campaign to obstruct and emasculate Brexit.

that relentless hostility shone through most recently in debates in the House of Lords, where unelected, unaccounta­ble peers lined up to sneer at the public’s wish for national freedom.

too much of this spirit of fearfulnes­s and surrender has infused our side in the negotiatio­ns with the EU over withdrawal, leading to a catalogue of concession­s in return for little.

In the same vein, the Civil Service, those past masters at delay, keep pushing for an ever longer transition period in the hope that institutio­nal inertia may ultimately thwart Britain’s departure. Now the Establishm­ent is refusing to let go of its new weapon: the customs union.

Over the weekend, Business Secretary Greg Clark told the BBC that theresa May’s proposed new customs partnershi­p – a fudged version of the customs union that was rejected by her Brexit cabinet only last week – remained on the table.

An arrangemen­t of this kind is necessary, he declared, otherwise the British economy will suffer and trade will shrink. Gazing into his crystal ball, Clark specifical­ly warned that 3,500 car jobs at toyota could be at risk without the customs deal. WHETHER intentiona­l or not, these comments echo the same old soundtrack of alarm that always accompanie­s calls for submission to Brussels. But Project Fear did not work in 2016 and it will not work now.

that is partly because, as has been well-rehearsed in recent days, the new customs partnershi­p would create a bureaucrat­ic nightmare, hurt our economic prospects, hit our global trade and undermine our democracy.

the jewel in the crown of Brexit will be the ability to reach our own trade deals around the world, particular­ly with the fast developing nations of Asia – something that Brussels simply cannot stomach. In their efforts to hype concerns about Brexit and be as obstructiv­e as possible, EU officials, Dublin and the pro-EU brigade here talk endlessly about the difficulty of the Irish border.

In reality, the ‘Irish question’ has been cynically seized upon and ‘weaponised’ by fearmonger­ing remainers who hope to cajole us into staying put.

No one actually wants a hard border. As John thompson, the head of HMrC, has made clear, with goodwill and imaginatio­n, the problem is easily resolvable, especially since Britain and Ireland have operated a common travel area since 1923.

Indeed, the whole question of a customs arrangemen­t with the EU has been grossly exaggerate­d by the remain lobby. Only about 12 per cent of Britain’s GDP involves exports to the EU, while just 8 per cent of British companies trade with the EU.

Most of our economy is based on the domestic market, which suffers from Brussels’ protection­ist policies that push up prices and increase burdens on businesses.

Freed from the dead hand of Brussels, consumer costs – especially of food – will fall and enterprise will flourish. It is absurd to cling to the idea, eagerly peddled by the anti-Brexiteers, that the EU is some kind of engine of economic growth.

Just the opposite is true. EU officialdo­m is the enemy of jobs and innovation, as is reflected in its cripplingl­y high rates of unemployme­nt, especially among young people, in EU countries like Spain and Greece.

And EU-led stagnation is bound to worsen in the coming years, as Brussels presses ahead with its cherished ideologica­l project of further political integratio­n. THAT will mean more taxation in the name of harmonisat­ion, more regulation, more centralise­d governance, more streams of directives.

Britain will have to be part of that if we end up in a customs union.

Brexit gives us the chance to break free from the continuing destructio­n of our sovereignt­y. that is what the British public recognised in 2016.

tragically, however, the Establishm­ent, reflected in its doom-mongering asides, remains mired in timid defeatism, reluctant either to challenge the EU or contemplat­e change.

 ??  ?? Upbeat: Boris Johnson in Washington DC yesterday
Upbeat: Boris Johnson in Washington DC yesterday
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