Daily Mirror

Your Brexit’s broken

May is shattered as EU rejects her Chequers plan UK closer than ever to crashing out with no deal

- BY BEN GLAZE in Salzburg, Austria

THERESA May’s Chequers Brexit plan is in tatters after EU leaders bluntly rejected it.

The Prime Minister was left furious at a crunch summit in Salzburg yesterday as European Council chief Donald Tusk said: “It will not work.”

It raised the chances of a no-deal Brexit.

EMBATTLED Theresa May cut an isolated figure yesterday as EU chiefs brutally dismissed her Brexit plan, giving her just four weeks to rescue a deal.

European Council President Donald Tusk plunged Britain’s withdrawal into a fresh crisis as he said the PM’s Chequers proposal “will not work”.

And he revealed all 27 leaders gathered for the summit in Salzburg agreed her blueprint was a non-starter.

It pushes Britain closer than ever to a no-deal Brexit.

Mr Tusk revealed: “Every- body shared the view that while there are positive elements in the Chequers proposal, the suggested framework for economic co-operation will not work - not least because it risks underminin­g the single market.”

Mrs May was left shaking with anger as she admitted her meeting with Mr Tusk had been “frank” – which is diplomatic code for a row.

But the PM continued to ignore warnings her plan was doomed and claimed it is “the only serious and credible propositio­n on the table”. Crucial to the stand-off are rows over the Northern Ireland border and Britain’s plans for “frictionle­ss movement of goods”.

The EU wants a backstop option which would effectivel­y keep Northern Ireland in an EU customs union to avoid a hard border with the Republic.

But the Government says Brussels’ proposal would split the United Kingdom. Britain is due to come up with new suggestion­s for a “regulatory border” in the Irish Sea, which negotiator­s hope will satisfy the EU and the Democratic Unionist

Party, which Mrs May relies on for her slim Commons majority.

Signalling she could compromise, she insisted Chequers is the only proposal on the table “at the moment” for avoiding a hard border.

It could allow the PM to ditch her plan if the EU suggests something better.

Leaders are to meet next in Brussels on October 18 for a make-or-break showdown.

Mr Tusk predicted it would be the “moment of truth”.

He said: “In October we expect maximum progress and results in the Brexit talks, and then we will decide whether conditions are there to call an extra summit in November to

The PM needs to drop her reckless red lines and put forward a credible plan SIR KEIR STARMER SHADOW BREXIT SECRETARY YESTERDAY

finalise and formalise the deal.” Mrs May was visibly angry and speaking more quickly than usual when she addressed journalist­s. She admitted: “There’s a lot of work to be done.”

But, despite the ticking clock and slapdown from Brussels, she added: “If the political will is there on the other side, I’m confident we will reach a deal and to do so is in the EU’s interests as well as the UK’s.”

Mrs May had arrived in the Austrian Alps hoping EU leaders would hand her a pre-Tory conference boost by backing her plan. It instead raises the chances of Britain crashing out on March 29 with no deal.

Shadow Brexit Secretary Sir Keir Starmer said: “It has been clear for weeks that Theresa May’s Chequers proposals cannot deliver the comprehens­ive plan we need to protect jobs, the economy and avoid a hard border in Northern Ireland.

“With just weeks to go until a deal must be struck, the Prime Minister cannot keep ignoring this reality. She needs to urgently drop her reckless red lines and put forward a credible plan.”

Mrs May also rejected calls from some EU leaders for a fresh Brexit vote, insisting: “There will be no second referendum.”

Malta’s Joseph Muscat and Czech PM Andrej Babis,had added their weight to the campaign for another poll.

Mr Muscat said: “I think most of us would welcome a situation where there is the possibilit­y of the British people putting things into perspectiv­e, seeing what has been negotiated, seeing the options and then deciding once and for all.”

A fresh vote would “solve the problem” of Brexit, claimed Mr Babis. Meanwhile France’s president’ Emmanuel Macron branded leaders of the Leave campaign “liars”, who “left the next day, so they didn’t have to manage it”.

The row comes as a poll revealed Labour would easily win the next election if it backed a referendum on the final deal.

It would lose 200,000 voters but the net gain would be 1.5 million and at least 60 seats, according to a YouGov survey of 10,000 people commission­ed by the People’s Vote campaign.

Tottenham MP David Lammy said: “Labour should be backing a People’s Vote on the outcome of Brexit negotiatio­ns.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? TAKING THE CAKE BRITAIN has been accused of wanting to “cherry pick” and “have its cake and eat it” in Brexit negotiatio­ns. So EU chief Donald Tusk seized the chance to troll Theresa May in a barbed Instagram post. Sharing a picture of himself helping her to a cupcake during a buffet at the Salzburg summit, he added the comment: “A piece of cake, perhaps? Sorry, no cherries.” It is unlikely the PM ate the treat herself – she is a type 1 diabetic and avoids cakes and desserts, opting for fruit instead.
TAKING THE CAKE BRITAIN has been accused of wanting to “cherry pick” and “have its cake and eat it” in Brexit negotiatio­ns. So EU chief Donald Tusk seized the chance to troll Theresa May in a barbed Instagram post. Sharing a picture of himself helping her to a cupcake during a buffet at the Salzburg summit, he added the comment: “A piece of cake, perhaps? Sorry, no cherries.” It is unlikely the PM ate the treat herself – she is a type 1 diabetic and avoids cakes and desserts, opting for fruit instead.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom