The Scotsman

Another blow to May as Davis brands Chequers plan a ‘non-starter’

- ANDREW WOODCOCK

No “self-respecting democracy” would accept the terms for Britain’s future relations with the EU set out in Theresa May’s Chequers plan, former Brexit secretary David Davis has said.

In a speech to German business chiefs in Munich, Mr Davis branded the Chequers plan “a non-starter” which was “in no-one’s interests” and would be worse than no-deal.

He rejected as unacceptab­le her plans for a free trade area for goods under a common rulebook, and dismissed her other key proposal for a “Facilitate­d Customs Arrangemen­t” as “clunky and impractica­l”.

Mr Davis warned

that the EU’S demands for further concession­s would put Britain on the path for a final deal which is “likely to look an awful lot like membership”.

Even if it were accepted by the EU and MPS in Westminste­r, the adoption of Mrs May’s blueprint would fuel public resentment and distrust in politician­s and feed the rise in populist politics across Europe, he said.

Instead, the UK should ditch the Chequers model and instead pursue a Canadastyl­e free trade agreement, based on mutual recognitio­n of regulation­s and standards, with each side free to diverge as it wishes.

Mr Davis warned that Mrs May’s proposal of a “common rulebook” for goods would put the UK in the position of having to obey regulation­s drawn up in Brussels.

“For a nation that is seeking its independen­ce and endeavouri­ng to chart its own path in the world - how can this possibly be acceptable?” he asked. “For the fifth largest economy in the world, leading the way on innovation, we cannot be governed by a body that we have no control over.

“It should not even be contemplat­ed.

“We should be discussing these regulation­s as friends and collaborat­ors, by all means.

“But we cannot simply accept them as subordinat­e rule takers. No selfrespec­ting democracy could.”

The Prime Minister’s proposal for Britain to collect customs levies on behalf of the EU was “just as clunky and impractica­l as it sounds”, he said.

And he warned: “There is widespread opposition

to Chequers as it stands, let alone further concession­s. It goes beyond the Prime Minister’s red lines, and it is seen as unworkable by the EU.

“But most importantl­y, the British people will not accept it.

“But if a deal like this is accepted by both sides, resentment among the British people would swiftly return, distrust in politician­s would deepen and it would feed the electoral fortunes of European populist parties. Chequers, then, is in no-one’s interests.

“The EU is often correctly described as having a democratic deficit. But Chequers is devoid of democracy altogether.

“A bad deal really is worse than no deal.”

 ??  ?? 0 David Davis: plans for free trade area are unacceptab­le
0 David Davis: plans for free trade area are unacceptab­le

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