The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Brexit secretary confident of timetable

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A Number 10 spokeswoma­n said: “The position the prime minister has set out many times hasn’t changed. It’s not in anyone’s interest for there to be a cliff edge.

“We want to give certainty to businesses. That’s the position of David Davis and Philip Hammond also.

“What the prime minister has been clear about is that clearly leaving the EU means we will be leaving the customs union.”

Addressing businessme­n, the Brexit secretary said he believed exit talks would be done by the twoyear deadline.

Asked if the UK would be straight out of the customs union, he replied: “I would have thought so.”

Mr Davis said any transition period was likely to end in 2022.

He said he was “entirely aligned” with the chancellor on putting jobs and prosperity first.

“I firmly believe that our approach puts jobs and prosperity first. So much so I didn’t even think it was necessary to say it at the beginning,” he said.

Mr Davis said there would be “practicall­y no burden” on businesses under the government’s plan to extend rights to EU citizens already living in the UK.

He added: “My job is to bring back control of migration to Westminste­r. It is not to slam the door on immigratio­n.

“We will bring immigratio­n down but in a way and at a pace that does not cause labour shortages or undermine the nation’s need for new talent.”

Mr Hammond, speaking in Berlin, insisted there had to be a “smooth and orderly path” to new arrangemen­ts under any Brexit deal.

Although he did not put a timescale on the transition­al process, Mr Hammond said: “(Businesses) all need certainty, well ahead of time, that they won’t have tariffs suddenly imposed on them part-way through their contracts, or that their shipments won’t face customs delays.”

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