Western Mail

Davis challenged over ‘vassal state’ status for UK during Brexit transition

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DAVID Davis faced claims the UK would be a “vassal state” during the Brexit transition period as he clashed with prominent Tory Euroscepti­c Jacob Rees-Mogg.

The Brexit Secretary confirmed that the UK would be “happy to accept” European Court of Justice (ECJ) oversight and replicate some EU rules during a transition period which could last as long as 27 months after the UK leaves the EU in March 2019. However, Mr Davis insisted that after 2021 the UK will be “free of all these fetters” as he was questioned by MPs.

Mr Rees-Mogg, chairman of the influentia­l Tory European Research Group, challenged Mr Davis at the Commons Exiting the EU Committee.

The Brexit Secretary rejected the suggestion from Mr Rees-Mogg that Britain would be a “vassal state” by continuing to pay into the EU budget and remaining subject to the jurisdicti­on of the ECJ.

“If that were going to be the case in perpetuity, my answer would probably be ‘yes,’ but the answer for a short time, ‘no,’” Mr Davis said.

However, Mr Rees-Mogg said the Government’s acceptance that there would a transition period, rather than the implementa­tion period originally proposed by Theresa May in her 2017 Florence speech, marked a “big shift” in policy.

“Transition is different because transition means we are de facto inside the European Union for that period and we are only actually out at the end of the transition,” he said.

“That is a big shift in Government policy and a big move away from the vote in June 2016.”

Mr Davis told him: “We are going to see an implementa­tion period as described pretty much in the Prime Minister’s Florence speech.

“We will do so in a way which will leave us in 2021 free of all these fetters. No vassal state us.”

The Brexit Secretary said substantiv­e negotiatio­ns on Britain’s future relationsh­ip with the European Union should be concluded by the time it leaves the bloc in March 2019.

“It would be unwise to get sucked into a negotiatio­n during the transition period itself which is substantiv­e, major,” he said.

“Why? Because the balance of power in the negotiatio­n alters. The aim then on the part of the commission would be to spin out the negotiatio­n.”

The EU’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier has indicated there will simply be a “political declaratio­n” on the framework of the future relationsh­ip in October. The Brexit Secretary said he was relaxed about the transition period and indicated it could last as long as 27 months after Brexit - even though Brussels wants it to expire in December 2020.

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