Scottish Daily Mail

Cabinet split over Brexit as Hammond has a dig at Boris

- By John Stevens Deputy Political Editor

THE Cabinet was at odds over Brexit last night as Philip Hammond said the option of leaving the EU without a deal was ‘ridiculous’, contradict­ing Boris Johnson and David Davis.

The Chancellor accused some Tory MPs of underminin­g the Prime Minister’s negotiatio­ns by secretly wanting talks to break up without agreement so the country has a clean break from the EU.

In a dig at the Foreign Secretary and Brexit Secretary, who have claimed leaving without a deal would not be disastrous, Mr Hammond said it was not a sensible option.

On a trip to India, Mr Hammond told Bloomberg: ‘There are definitely some people on both sides who do not want a deal, they do not want to see Britain continuing to collaborat­e in what the Prime

‘We have to show goodwill’

Minister described in a letter as a deep and special partnershi­p with the European Union.’

He predicted with a ‘high degree of confidence’ there would be ‘tensions’ in the process, but added: ‘I’m clear the objective from the UK side is to reach a deal and what I’m hearing from my counterpar­ts in Europe is that is their objective.

‘Those people who are hoping for no deal, I say we have to disprove their thinking by showing there is clear goodwill on the Europe side to reach a deal.’

Speaking in the Middle East, Theresa May insisted the Brexit deal could be completed within two years, but acknowledg­ed that the full free trade deal, which would have to be signed off by every EU parliament, might take longer.

Mr Johnson, who was meeting Germany’s foreign minister Sigmar Gabriel in London, said he was confident of reaching an agreement with the remaining 27 EU member states, but insisted if they failed the UK would continue to thrive.

‘It is possible to do a deal that is win-win. I don’t want to be unduly pessimisti­c. I think we can get a deal,’ he said. ‘But if you ask me ‘If we don’t get a deal would the UK survive?’ I think we would more than survive.’

Last month, Mr Davis said that leaving without a deal was ‘not as frightenin­g as some people think but not as simple as some people think’.

Mr Hammond yesterday said it would not be ‘realistic’ to expect 100 per cent support on both free movement and the economy at the end of the two-year negotiatio­ns.

‘The issue for most people in the UK is they want control of their borders and they want to be outside of the EU’s structures, but within those constraint­s they want to go on trading as openly and freely as possible,’ he said.

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