The Scotsman

Hunt warns likelihood of no-deal Brexit growing daily

● Foreign Secretary says job losses will ensue on both sides of the Channel if Brussels fails to strike withdrawal agreement

- By MARGARET NEIGHBOUR newsdeskts@scotsman.com

The likelihood of Britain exiting the EU without a deal is “increasing by the day”, Jeremy Hunt has said.

Ahead of talks with his opposite numbers in France and Austria yesterday and today, the Foreign Secretary insisted if Brussels failed to strike a withdrawal agreement with the UK, it would cause job losses on both sides of the Channel “if Brexit goes wrong”.

Meanwhile, Theresa May will hold talks with French president Emmanuel Macron on Friday as the UK government steps up engagement with leaders on the continent.

Mr Hunt accused the European Commission of waiting for Britain “to blink” in Brexit talks as he urged Paris and Berlin to put pressure on Brussels to cut a deal.

He told the London Evening Standard: “The probabilit­y of no deal is increasing by the day until we see a change of approach from the European Commission, who have this view that they just need to wait and Britain will blink. That is just a profound misunderst­anding of us as a nation.

“There is real chance of no deal by accident. Everyone is assuming no, no, no, this will never happen. Well actually, it could.

“France and Germany have to send a strong signal to the commission that we need to negotiate a pragmatic and sensible outcome that protects jobs on both sides of the Channel because for every job lost in the UK, there will be jobs lost in Europe as well if Brexit goes wrong.”

The Foreign Secretary said a no deal would make it harder for European businesses to access finance via the City.

He said: “There would not just be economic consequenc­es for the UK. There would be profound economic consequenc­es for the rest of Europe.

“Probably the City, as the financier

0 Jeremy Hunt with French foreign minister Jean-yves Le Drian

of European business, is the central point to make here. If it became harder for European businesses to access finance, that is far from trivial.

“The City itself would find a way to thrive, whatever the outcome of the Brexit negotiatio­ns.

“If it became a low-tax, lowregulat­ion offshoot fully outside the EU, it would find a way to thrive in those circumstan­ces. But for European businesses, JEREMY HUNT UK Foreign Secretary

the impact would be profound.”

Mr Hunt said a “breakdown in relations and trust between Britain and European countries” would be a “profound geo-strategic mistake”.

The comments came after Tory MP Marcus Fysh accused Downing Street of launching a scaremonge­ring campaign.

He told the BBC: “Number 10 has briefed that they want to scare people witless.

“Thatisirre­sponsible,scaremonge­ring nonsense and it should stop right now and they should get behind Brexit, which people voted for.”

The prospect of a no-deal exit has caused concern in the food industry. The director of the British Sandwich and Food To Go Associatio­n, Jim Winship, said: “If we suddenly have border controls being introduced that aren’t there now, that’s going to cause some massive problems with the fresh ingredient­s.

“We live in a just-in-time world. We don’t stockpile ingredient­s.

“It’s going to limit the amount of choice consumers have if we suddenly crash out.”

Last week Scottish secretary David Mundell said leaving the EU without a Brexit deal would be preferable to breaking up the Union.

Mr Mundell said he could not accept a Brexit deal that “threatens the integrity of the United Kingdom”, including any “backstop” plan to prevent a hard border in Ireland that creates a new customs frontier in the Irish Sea.

Mr Mundell’s comments followed a stark warning from Mr Hunt on a visit to Berlin that the EU risked damaging relations with the UK for a generation unless it showed more flexibilit­y and a “real change in approach” in negotiatio­ns.

“The probabilit­y of no deal is increasing by thedayunti­lweseea change of approach from the European Commission...”

Treasury figures show UK made £8.8bn net payment to EU last year

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