Daily Record

Take some responsibi­lity for first time in your life

Blackford calls on Tories to stop PM’s ‘act of madness’

- BY TORCUIL CRICHTON Westminste­r Editor

TORY MPs have been urged to stop Boris Johnson’s “act of madness” in defying internatio­nal law by breaking the terms of the EU Withdrawal Deal. The Prime Minister took a verbal battering last night as the controvers­ial Internal Markets Bill was debated in the Commons. Johnson personally defended the clauses that would give UK ministers powers to break a deal with the EU on deciding customs regulation with Northern Ireland. The move has caused widespread concern about the damage to the UK’s internatio­nal reputation with some Tory MPs ready to defy the government. With squirming excuses, the Tory leader accused EU negotiator­s of going to “extreme and unreasonab­le lengths” in trade negotiatio­ns thereby forcing him to threaten to renege on internatio­nal law. Johnson sought to quell a growing Tory revolt by claiming the legislatio­n would strengthen the hand of negotiator­s trying to strike an EU trade deal. In an effort to reassure Conservati­ve MPs, Johnson said the measures were an “insurance policy” he hoped would “never be invoked” if an agreement was reached with Brussels. But Labour’s Ed Miliband, who stood in for leader Keir Starmer, wiped the floor with the Prime Minister’s arguments as Johnson grimaced on the Government benches. Miliband told the Commons: “Our global reputation for rule-making not rule-breaking is one of the reasons we are so respected around the world.

“And when you ask of people to think of Britain they think of the rule of law and let’s be clear after the Prime Minister’s speech this is not an argument about Remain versus Leave, it is an argument about right versus wrong.”

Miliband took a swipe at Johnson, saying “for the first time in his life it is time to take responsibi­lity”.

The Shadow Business Secretary added: “It is time to ‘fess up. Either he wasn’t straight with the country about the deal in the first place or he didn’t understand it.

“Because a competent government would never have entered into a binding agreement with provisions it could not live with.”

Mi l iband also found common ground with the SNP by arguing against parts of the bill that allow UK ministers to become involved in previously devolved policy areas.

Ian Blackford warned Tory MPs not to follow the Prime Minister by breaking the law.

“Stop the Prime Minister in this act of madness,” the SNP Westminste­r leader told the Commons. “This is a test for the House this evening, do not wait for the committee stage. Legally, morally, ethically, the right thing to do is to vote down this Bill tonight.”

“Do not follow the Prime Minister in acquiescin­g in breaking the law because if you vote for second reading tonight, that’s exactly what you’re all doing.”

Blackford added: “So this is a test and I understand the challenge that Conservati­ve members face – don’t support the Prime Minister by breaking the law this evening, it is as simple as that.”

In a torrid day for the Government, David Cameron became the fifth ex-Prime Minister to speak out against Johnson’s Brexit plans.

Cameron, who rarely speaks out after presiding over the 2016 EU referendum, said: “Passing an act of parliament and then going on to break an internatio­nal treaty obligation is the very, very last thing you should contemplat­e.

Several Tory grandees, including the former Attorney General Geoffrey Cox, have spoken out and could abstain in a showdown vote next week.

 ??  ?? SQUIRMING Johnson took a verbal battering over Internal Markets Bill
SQUIRMING Johnson took a verbal battering over Internal Markets Bill
 ??  ?? RESPECTED Ed Miliband
RESPECTED Ed Miliband

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