The Daily Telegraph

Suella Braverman:

Where is the fighting spirit we are famous for? There are still good ways for us to leave the EU and thrive

- SUELLA BRAVERMAN Suella Braverman is the Conservati­ve MP for Fareham

My parents emigrated to the United Kingdom from Kenya and Mauritius in the Sixties. They were born during the British Empire and admired this country. The UK that inspired them was one that was confident in the world, pioneering in statecraft and fearless in the face of adversity. A Britain that led the way for others and contribute­d so much good to the world. That is the vision of Britain which I have inherited and in which I profoundly believe.

Yet, at this crossroads in our history, the British people are being fed a diet of fear, pessimism and doom. A choice between surrender or catastroph­e. Where is that fighting spirit that made our country so great? All I see is defeatism and appeasemen­t.

The truth is that the choice on offer is a false one. In fact, there are two clear alternativ­es to the fake Brexit that we are being offered.

Firstly, and preferably, is an advanced free-trade agreement between the EU and the UK, building on the excellent Canada-eu free trade agreement.

The Canada Plus option is a realistic route to follow if the Prime Minister’s deal is voted down. Go back to the EU and finally accept the offer they have made three times already. We eliminate tariffs on all industrial and agricultur­al goods. Regulation­s, standards and conformity assessment­s are based on mutual recognitio­n and, for services, on equivalenc­e. Full autonomy over our rules and laws is restored to our domestic legislator­s and courts. Free movement ends and we are genuinely free to get on with that US trade deal, among others.

The Northern Ireland border is not the convoluted quandary that it has been made out to be. Given that more than 70 per cent of the traders on the border are small traders, by using the latest technology – pioneered at recently upgraded and high-volume ports such as Dubai – no hard border need arise.

Trusted trader schemes and an expanded Authorised Economic Operators scheme – already in operation in the EU – cover those affected. Rules of Origin and regulatory compliance are checked pre-border. Practical, tried and tested methods exist to avoid the annexation of Northern Ireland. No need for an indefinite customs union. No need for an EU veto on our right to leave it. No need for a border down the Irish Sea as proposed in the current deal.

This is a true Brexit. It is viable and within our grasp.

The second best option is a Clean Global Brexit. Much has been made of the “horrors” of World Trade Organisati­on rules. Yet WTO rules form the basis of our commercial relationsh­ips with many countries outside of the EU – where, incidental­ly, our exports are growing at a faster pace than with the EU.

They also underpin the profitable trade between hundreds of other countries all over the world which are not part of a customs union. Those prawns from the Philippine­s that arrive at Southampto­n, the Toyotas made in Derbyshire that we ship to the US, the clothes in our high street shops that were made in Bangladesh – none of this trade was pursuant to full free-trade agreements but it was on the basis of lower-level “side agreements” or, in other cases, “no deal”.

Crucially, however, a Clean Global Brexit presents compelling long-term economic benefits for the UK – convenient­ly overlooked by the Treasury and Bank of England last week.

By opening our markets to foreign producers from beyond the EU, competitio­n and quality increase, lowering prices for UK consumers – of particular benefit to those on lower incomes – and productivi­ty grows. And by expanding markets for UK producers, demand for British goods will rise, helping profits, enabling investment and growing jobs. Many economists endorse this view and for us to shut the door on this option is madness.

People are worried about obstructio­ns to trade and the costs of a Clean Global Brexit scenario. Yes, there will be short-term challenges, but, based on what I saw during my time at the Department for Exiting the EU, the plans for this scenario are advanced.

Moreover, our bargaining position in relation to the EU is strong. As the net purchaser in the relationsh­ip, the EU has more to lose and more import tariffs to pay to the UK than the other way around.

The political will is already there: the Mayor of Calais has said that flow will be prioritise­d in any scenario, with no unnecessar­y checks at the border. In any event, WTO rules prohibit discrimina­tion and instead mandate “seamlessne­ss” at the border.

Let us not be cowed by fear at this pivotal moment in our great nation’s story. Let us muster our resolve to face down the pessimists. Those who see Brexit through the lens of declinism are misguided. Let us choose confidence in our history, pride in our legacy and trust in this sceptred isle. As a nation brimming with ingenuity, courage and abundance, we will find the way to thrive. We just need to believe it ourselves.

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