The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Allies quash talks of fresh referendum

Officials not in favour of new EU vote

- SHAUN CONNOLLY

Key allies of Theresa May have distanced themselves from reports they are involved in planning for a new Brexit referendum.

The prime minister’s defacto deputy, Cabinet Office Minister David Lidington, and Mrs May’s chief of staff Gavin Barwell, indicated they are not in favour of a new EU withdrawal vote.

The move followed reports that Mr Lidington held talks with Labour MPS last week aimed at getting cross-party consensus for a new referendum.

In response, Mr Lidington tweeted a link to last week’s Hansard record of Parliament­ary proceeding­s, where he set out how a second vote was a possibilit­y, but could be “divisive not decisive”.

Mr Barwell tweeted: “Happy to confirm I am *not* planning a 2nd referendum with political opponents (or anyone else to anticipate the next question)”

Education Secretary Damian Hinds insisted cabinet has not discussed a second EU referendum.

Asked if Cabinet had talked about the issue, Mr Hinds told Sky News: “No. Government policy couldn’t be clearer. We are here to act on the will of the British people clearly expressed in the referendum.”

But former universiti­es minister Sam Gyimah, who quit his post last month over Mrs May’s Brexit deal, said there was “nothing inherently undemocrat­ic” about a second referendum, which he added could “break the deadlock”.

Speaking on Radio 5 Pienaar’s Politics, Mr Gyimah said: “Asking the people the same question again, they are at liberty to say back loud and clear they have the same answer.

“There is nothing inherently undemocrat­ic about asking the question again if parliament can’t resolve it – and Parliament can’t resolve it because we have a hung parliament.

“I see it as a democratic way of resolving this impasse as we know Parliament is deadlocked.

“I would put Remain and the prime minister’s deal on the ballot... Compared to the prime minister’s deal, Remain is a lot better.”

As cabinet members tried to dampen talk of a fresh Brexit poll, Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liam Fox indicated he could support a free vote for MPS on Brexit options.

Asked about a free vote, Dr Fox told BBC1’S The Andrew Marr Show: “That’s not something we have considered.

“I have to say, personally, I wouldn’t have a huge problem with Parliament as a whole having a say on what the options were.”

Dr Fox signalled he thought there could be EU movement in the new year regarding anxieties Brexiteers have that Britain could be “trapped” in the Northern Ireland backstop.

He said: “It’s very clear that the EU understand what the problem is. And it’s a question now, without unpicking the whole of the Withdrawal Agreement, can we find a mechanism of operating the backstop in a way that actually removes those anxieties.”

The backstop, intended to prevent the return of a hard border in Ireland, would keep the UK obeying EU customs rules if a wider trade deal had not been agreed by the end of a transition period.

And Labour made it clear it will not bring a confidence motion against the Government until after a meaningful vote on Mrs May’s Brexit deal is held.

Shadow communitie­s secretary Andrew Gwynne, who is also the party’s election co-ordinator, told the BBC: “The main thing we want next week is to have that meaningful vote on the Withdrawal Agreement...we want that before Christmas.

“Parliament has to decide whether or not it supports the prime minister’s deal and fundamenta­lly until we secure that meaningful vote from the Parliament we can’t move to the next stage.”

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Prime Minister Theresa May throws a ball for a border collie called Blitz as she and her husband Philip leave following a church service near her Maidenhead constituen­cy.
Picture: PA. Prime Minister Theresa May throws a ball for a border collie called Blitz as she and her husband Philip leave following a church service near her Maidenhead constituen­cy.
 ??  ?? Cabinet Office Minister David Lidington.
Cabinet Office Minister David Lidington.

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