Manchester Evening News

PM’s plan ‘worse than being in EU’

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FORMER Brexit secretary David Davis has branded Theresa May’s Chequers Brexit blueprint which triggered his Cabinet resignatio­n as “actually almost worse than being in”.

Mr Davis said he would vote against the Prime Minister’s Chequers plan in any Commons showdown as Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liam Fox took a swipe at Chancellor Philip Hammond’s no deal warnings.

Mr Davis also warned that Mrs May’s statement that she would not be “pushed into accepting compromise­s on the Chequers proposals that are not in our national interest” risked becoming an “an incredible open sesame to all”.

He told BBC One’s The Andrew Marr Show: “No, I’d vote against it, it would be rather odd for me to resign over something and then vote for it when it came back.

“In my view, the Chequers proposal – it’s not a deal, we shouldn’t call it the Chequers deal, it’s the Chequers proposal – is actually almost worse than being in.”

Mr Davis added: “We will be under the rule of the EU with respect to all of our manufactur­ed goods and agri-foods, that’s a really serious concession, what about take back control, it doesn’t work?

“That actually leaves us in a position where they dictate our future rules without us having a say at all, so it’s a worse deal.”

Asked if Theresa May could stay on as Prime Minister if she could not get the Chequers plan through the Commons, he said: “Oh yes.”

Mr Davis cited Tory MP Nick Boles’ concerns over Chequers, adding: “We’ve got to turn round with other alternativ­es.”

He also hinted at earlier tensions within the Government’s Brexit negotiatin­g team, stating: “I was always the Brexit Secretary, the question is whether I controlled events, that’s another matter.”

On Chequers, he said: “I was quite clear in my mind that she (Mrs May) saw this as an opportunit­y to be grasped. My disappoint­ment about Chequers is it actually denies us a large part of that opportunit­y.”

On his successor Dominic Raab, he added: “He will do the best he can on the Chequers deal, but unfortunat­ely the Chequers deal is not one which is going to be good enough for the UK.”

Mr Davis said he would “certainly not” support the People’s Vote, adding: “The point about referenda is that they are once in a generation.”

Referring to the Treasury, Dr Fox said: “Can you think back in all your time in politics where the Treasury have made prediction­s that were correct 15 years out, I can’t, they didn’t predict the financial crisis that happened. So this idea that we can predict what our borrowing would be 15 years in advance is just a bit hard to swallow.”

He added: “To say what a GDP figure would be 15 years ahead is not a predictive power that I’ve known the Treasury to have in my time in politics.”

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 ??  ?? Former Brexit secretary David Davis
Former Brexit secretary David Davis

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