Wales On Sunday

Adonis in call for others to speak out on Brexit

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LORD Adonis has urged other senior figures to speak out against Brexit after quitting as Theresa May’s infrastruc­ture tsar in protest at her policy on Europe.

The Labour peer resigned as chairman of the National Infrastruc­ture Commission, claiming the Prime Minister had sided with Ukip and the “Tory hard right”.

The former transport secretary also lashed out at the Government’s handling of the East Coast rail franchise, claiming a taxpayer-funded “bailout” was evidence that Whitehall was too distracted by Brexit to focus on running the country.

In his resignatio­n letter, seen by the Press Associatio­n, he told Mrs May: “Brexit is a populist and nationalis­t spasm worthy of Donald Trump.

“After the narrow referendum vote, a form of associate membership of the EU might have been attempted without rupturing Britain’s key trading and political alliances.

“Instead, by allying with Ukip and the Tory hard right to wrench Britain out of the key economic and political institutio­ns of modern Europe, you are pursuing a course fraught with danger. Even within Ireland, there are set to be barriers between people and trade.”

Whitehall sources indicated that Lord Adonis, whose frequent criticism of Brexit had caused outrage among Tory Euroscepti­cs, had “jumped before he was pushed”.

But the peer insisted it was his decision to quit, accusing Downing Street insiders of “dirty tricks”.

He urged others to follow his example in speaking out.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I don’t believe the Brexit policy is sustainabl­e and I believe that people like me who have a leadership position should be out there next year arguing passionate­ly with the British people as to why staying in the EU is the right thing to do, alongside sorting out the deep social crisis which Britain is now in the midst of, which I think is a good part of the reason why Brexit started in the first place.”

Lord Adonis said the 17.4 million voters who backed Brexit in the referendum were “absolutely entitled to their view” but “I’m absolutely entitled, indeed I believe it’s my duty, to say why I think that was wrong”.

“Very few of the people who voted for Brexit voted, I believe, to make themselves poorer,” he said.

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