Scottish Daily Mail

Customs union means Brexit in name only

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LIKE hostages suffering from Stockholm syndrome, Westminste­r’s diehard Remainers have become so emotionall­y shackled to the EU that they cannot conceive of life outside it.

Objectivit­y has flown out of the window and their primary allegiance is no longer to the constituen­ts who elected them – or the 17.4million people who voted for Brexit – but to Brussels.

The latest evidence of this is their insistence that we must stay in the customs union (or ‘a’ customs union as they put it, without specifying the difference) after leaving the EU.

Let us be absolutely clear what this means. In exchange for frictionle­ss borders, Britain would have to abide by EU tariffs, be unable to strike independen­t trade deals with the wider world and have to accept regulation­s laid down by the European Court.

We would almost certainly be charged an exorbitant fee for the privilege but have no say in our own commercial future. It is the worst of all possible worlds.

Theresa May has let it be known she would never agree to such a situation. But even if she did, it wouldn’t be the end.

How long before the Europhiles demanded we stay in the single market and therefore allow free movement? We would be on the road to Brexit in name only – which is, of course, exactly what they want.

They hope to force through a Commons amendment next month committing the UK to staying in a customs union.

If it succeeds, the whole Brexit process could be destabilis­ed. Tory Brexiteers – already angry over the climbdown on fishing rights – would block any compromise and the Prime Minister’s position could become untenable.

Then Britain would face the most chilling threat of all – a general election that could put Jeremy Corbyn into power.

So before setting off this potentiall­y disastrous chain of events, Tory Remainers such as Anna Soubry, who proposed the Commons amendment, must think carefully about where their loyalties lie.

They vehemently object to being branded traitors. But if their anti-democratic manoeuvrin­gs usher in a Marxist Labour government, that is exactly what their party – and most of the country – will, rightly, think of them.

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