Daily Mail

Remainer Ken Clarke backs ‘dog’s breakfast’ deal

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

THE pro-European Tory veteran Ken Clarke gave Theresa May a boost by announcing he will support her Brexit withdrawal agreement in Parliament.

The former chancellor told BBC2’s Newsnight that the Prime Minister’s deal was ‘a bit of a dog’s breakfast’ – but backing it was better than risking a no-deal Brexit.

The grandee said it delivered continuity for business and laid the ground for critical future trade negotiatio­ns with Europe.

Support from the Conservati­ve Party’s most high-profile Remain supporter could persuade other MPs such as Nicky Morgan and Anna Soubry to follow suit. Last night another pro-European Tory MP, former minister Nick Boles, said he would follow Mr Clarke and support the deal.

Mr Clarke told the programme on Tuesday night: ‘I will support the deal because at least it gets us through to the transition... and then we can decide what our future economic relations are.

‘It’s a bit of a dog’s breakfast. I think if she hadn’t made so many efforts to appease she could have got a slightly better one. We could have just stayed in the single market and customs unions on the date of withdrawal before we go into the big negotiatio­ns on what the long-term aim is, but I will settle for this.’

He also hit out at the holding of referendum­s in the first place, describing them ‘as a silly way of running a modern country.’

Mr Clarke later told Sky News: ‘It keeps the borders as they are, it keeps everything continuous for British business, industry and investment and it paves the way for the transition period, because the serious negotiatio­ns start now really, about what are the long-term arrangemen­ts going to be, which will affect all our children and grandchild­ren.’

Chief Secretary to the Treasury Liz Truss also took to the airwaves to make the case for the deal, telling Tory MPs they face a choice between Mrs May’s Brexit deal – or not leaving the EU at all.

She told BBC Radio 5 Live’s Emma Barnett Show: ‘I am very, very worried about what the alternativ­e looks like, because I’m a democrat. I believe that people voted in good faith to leave the EU and we need to deliver that.’

Miss Truss said she was ‘confident we’ve got a good deal to send before Parliament’.

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