The Scotsman

Rudd warns Brexiteers: Back the PM

● Home Secretary gets tough as crucial week of negotiatio­ns starts

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS Westminste­r Correspond­ent

Brexiteers have been warned not to try and force the government’s hand ahead of a crucial week for the UK’S relationsh­ip with the European Union.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd said ministers would not be intimidate­d by hard Brexiteers in her own party as Cabinet prepares to agree the shape of UK-EU trade and present Brussels with its plan.

“I have a surprise for the Brexiteers, which is the committee that meets in order to help make these decisions is more united than they think,” she told Andrew Marr in a TV interview yesterday.

“We meet in the committee. We meet privately for discussion­s. I think that we will arrive at something which suits us all. There will be choices to be made within that, but we all want the same thing which is to arrive at a deal which works for the UK.”

The Brexit sub-committee of Cabinet will meet for two days of talks on the UK’S future relationsh­ip with the EU, with Prime Minister Theresa May also set for face-to-face discussion­s with chief EU negotiator Michel Barnier today and talks between officials in Brussels throughout the week.

It comes amid reports that disgruntle­d Tories are manoeuvrin­g to install a “dream team” of the “three Brexiteers” – Boris Johnson, Michael Gove and Jacob Reesmogg – in Downing Street. Mr Rees-mogg – who launched an attack on the civil service after leaked analysis showed any Brexit deal would harm the economy – has demanded the resignatio­n of the Prime Minister’s Europe adviser, Olly Robbins, a Sunday newspaper claimed.

Meanwhile, senior Tory backbenche­r Bernard Jenkin launched a fresh attack on Philip Hammond, accusing the Chancellor of pursing his own policy and “fomenting confusion” by claiming the

0 Home Secretary Amber Rudd told Andrew Marr the Cabinet Brexit sub-committee ‘wants a deal that works’ UK’S relationsh­ip with the EU might only change “very modestly” after Brexit.

Writing in a Sunday newspaper, Mr Jenkin said the Prime Minister “can only command a majority in Parliament on her present policy”.

He added: “Her MPS will back her, because we are overwhelmi­ngly at one with the majority of the British people who now want a clean Brexit and an end to the present uncertaint­y.

“It is time for all her ministers to back her too and to end the confusion they are fomenting in government.”

Ms Rudd attempted to clear up some of the confusion over customs arrangemen­ts, after the Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liam Fox last week claimed a customs union was “not possible” despite Mrs May’s claim to be keeping an “open mind” in her Lancaster House speech last year.

The Home Secretary said yesterday that ministers were committed to getting a deal which would enable Britain to strike free trade deals with other countries while maintainin­g “frictionle­ss” trade with the EU. Ms Rudd acknowledg­ed it would probably involve some form of customs “arrangemen­t” or “partnershi­p” with the EU.

She said: “We a want frictionle­ss trade at the border, we want to make sure that there is no border on the island of Ireland and we want to make sure that we can do trade deals outside of the European Union. That is the deal we are looking for.

“We need to have this wider agreement. I don’t know how far that will go over the next few weeks but I hope the government will be given the space to try and achieve that.”

The Home Secretary also said Brexit minister Steve Baker, who was forced to apologise to the Commons after giving credence to Mr Rees-mogg’s attack on the civil service, had had “an interestin­g week” and said the pair’s claims were “wrong”.

Former cabinet secretary Lord Gus O’donnell said attacks on the civil service for allegedly sabotaging Brexit are “completely crazy”.

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