Western Mail

Final Brexit deal is ‘within grasp’, says PM

- ANDREW WOODCOCK Press Associatio­n reporter newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THERESA May last night declared that final agreement on Brexit is “within our grasp” following a breakthrou­gh on future relations between the UK and EU.

Speaking outside 10 Downing Street, the Prime Minister said the joint UK/EU declaratio­n on post-Brexit is “the right plan for the UK”.

But her words were rounded on by opponents on both sides of the Brexit debate.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn derided the declaratio­n as “waffle”, former cabinet minister Priti Patel called it a “costly surrender”, and Cardiff South and Penarth MP Stephen Doughty accused Mrs May of making a “misleading” statement.

The apparent breakthrou­gh came as Lord Alan Sugar took aim at senior Tory politician­s over Brexit during an event in Cardiff, saying the public had been “lied to” over Brexit, describing Mrs May’s deal as a “bad” one. Meanwhile, Mrs May

told the House of Commons that the deal held out the prospect of a zerotariff free trade area with the EU of a kind the bloc had never offered to any other country.

And she said: “The British people want Brexit to be settled, they want a good deal that sets us on a course for a brighter future, and they want us to come together as a country and to move on to focus on the big issues at home, like our NHS.

“The deal that will enable us to do this is now within our grasp. In these crucial 72 hours ahead, I will do everything possible to deliver it for the British people.”

She garnered a bruising reception from MPs, who have warned they will vote down her deal in the crucial Commons debate expected early next month.

Former foreign secretary Boris Johnson urged her to “junk” her backstop plan for keeping the Irish border open, which he said “makes a nonsense of Brexit”.

Brexit-backing ex-Cabinet minister Priti Patel branded the deal “a costly surrender by the UK Government”, while the Leave-supporting MP for South-East Cornwall, Sheryll Murray, called it “a betrayal of Brexit” and Marcus Fysh (Yeovil) said it was “toxic”.

Mr Corbyn told the Commons that Mrs May had returned from Brussels with “26 pages of waffle”.

“It represents the worst of all worlds, no say over the rules that will continue to apply and no certainty to the future,” he said.

First Minister Carwyn Jones tweeted: “Although we are yet to see the final version of the political declaratio­n agreed by Sunday’s European Council, the changes we have seen so far do not convince us of a firm enough commitment to the sort of future relationsh­ip that will properly protect Wales’ interests.”

Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said the new text amounted to “lots of unicorns taking the place of facts about the future relationsh­ip”.

Labour MP Mr Doughty said: “PM only minutes in and she’s already misleading us – she said no role for ECJ [European Court of Justice] but it is there clear as day on page 23 of the political declaratio­n, article 134 on dispute settlement,” and posted a photograph of the Withdrawal Agreement on social media to prove his point.

Elsewhere, serial entreprene­ur and The Apprentice host Sir Alan Sugar was vehement in his criticism of how the Brexit campaign and subsequent negotiatio­ns had played out.

He told an audience at Cardiff Motorpoint Arena’s Introbiz Expo event: “The public didn’t know the ramificati­ons. Some of the public were lied to by [Boris] Johnson and [Michael] Gove with their £350m bus and I have advocated that the damage that could have been caused by those liars could or will change the lives of everybody in this country for the next God knows how many years.”

As Mrs May addressed MPs, it emerged that a post-Brexit transition period – during which the UK will continue to observe EU laws while having no say in them – could be extended beyond the scheduled date of the next general election in June 2022. A provision in the UK’s withdrawal agreement allowing a one-off extension from December 31 2020 to “December 20XX” was amended to read “for up to one or two years”.

This takes the last possible date for the UK to leave transition to December 31 2022, six months after the expected election date and six and a half years after the 2016 referendum.

The 26-page draft political declaratio­n was agreed in principle yesterday morning by negotiator­s who worked through the night on new directions issued by Mrs May and European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker when they met the previous evening.

It cleared the way for a Brussels summit on Sunday, at which leaders of the remaining 27 EU states are

expected to give their stamp of approval to both the future framework and a separate withdrawal agreement setting out the terms of the UK’s departure.

The new text calls for an “ambitious, broad, deep and flexible partnershi­p” between the EU and the UK in areas like trade, security and defence.

It confirms the UK’s right to develop an independen­t trade policy and end the free movement of EU nationals and leaves open the possibilit­y of using technologi­cal solutions to keep the Irish border open after Brexit.

But elements which infuriated Brexiteers included:

Plans for a “free trade area, combining deep regulatory and customs co-operation”, building and improving on the “single customs territory” provided for in the withdrawal agreement;

Provisions to ensure a “level playing field” on business competitio­n, which could cover areas including state aid, workplace and environmen­tal protection­s, climate change laws and tax; and

A role for the European Court of Justice in providing “binding” rulings on the interpreta­tion of EU law in disputes between the two sides.

Speaking outside Number 10, Mrs May said: “This is the right deal for the UK. It delivers on the vote of the referendum, it brings back control of our borders, our money and our laws and it does so while protecting jobs, protecting our security and protecting the integrity of the United Kingdom.”

She also confirmed that she would return to Brussels tomorrow for further talks with Mr Juncker.

Downing Street has always stressed that the 585-page legally binding withdrawal agreement setting out the terms of the UK’s departure from the EU – including a “divorce bill” estimated at £39bn – can only be finalised alongside the shorter declaratio­n setting out the two sides’ aspiration­s for their future relations.

It remains unclear whether further negotiatio­n will be needed on Sunday or whether the summit will be a simple rubber-stamping exercise.

The PM has faced pushback from Spain over the status of Gibraltar, while France is understood to have sought amendments to the wording on fishing rights in UK waters.

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 ?? Jack Taylor ?? > Prime Minster Theresa May makes a statement on Brexit outside Number 10 Downing Street yesterday
Jack Taylor > Prime Minster Theresa May makes a statement on Brexit outside Number 10 Downing Street yesterday

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