Yorkshire Post

Brexit Secretary calls on May’s Tory critics to ‘play for the team’

-

BREXIT NEGOTIATIO­NS must be tied up by the end of next month to allow new laws to be put in place in time for exit day, Dominic Raab has said.

The Brexit Secretary urged restive Tory MPs circling around Theresa May to “play for the team” and called on them to wait for the deal to be struck before taking action.

He spoke on a weekend where prominent Brexiteers held a rally in Harrogate as part of the Leave Means Leave campaign and Yorkshire campaigner­s joined the 670,000 people who descended on the capital for the People’s Vote march.

Former Ukip Farage, who told

this week that Mrs May was “the worst Prime Minister of my lifetime”, was joined by Labour’s Kate Hoey and Conservati­ve Owen Paterson for the event at Harrogate Convention Centre.

Furious backbenche­rs have warned the Prime Minister she is “drinking in the last chance saloon” after tensions flared over her negotiatin­g strategy following a Brussels summit.

Mrs May, who joined her husband Philip for a church service near to her Maidenhead constituen­cy yesterday, had said she was open to the possibilit­y of extending the transition period that kicks in after exit day by a matter of months.

Mr Raab suggested the extension could run for three months but said the move would have to “solve” the Irish backstop issue.

There must also be a route out of it so it did not run indefinite­ly, he said. “It could be time limited, there could be another mechanism,” he told BBC One’s

show. A meeting of EU leaders in December has been talked of as the final deadline for striking a deal.

But Mr Raab said he believed the exit agreement needed to be done “towards the end of November” to allow time for legislatio­n to be passed. leader Nigel

Asked about the growing criticism of Mrs May, he replied: “We are at the end stage of the negotiatio­n. It is understand­able that there are jitters on all sides of this debate.

“We need to hold our nerve. The end is in sight in terms of a good deal, the prize we want.

“I think colleagues should wait and see what that looks like. It won’t be a question of a fait accompli. They will have their full say over it.” He added: “Now is the time to play for the team.”

Brexit minister Suella Braverman said any extension to the transition period must not leave “us exposed to indefinite membership of the customs union”.

Mrs Braverman, a leading Tory Brexiteer, said there are “many views” about the Prime Minister’s Chequers proposals for future trade relations. She told Sky’s

“I see Chequers as a pragmatic proposal.”

Mrs Braverman did not condemn anonymous Tory MPs who have told Sunday newspapers that Mrs May is in a “killing zone” and should “bring her own noose” to a meeting with backbenche­rs.

“Colleagues are free to express themselves in the way they wish, but I am very clear that our party is stronger when it’s united,” she said.

But Tory former minister Robert Halfon said: “I say to the people giving those quotes, this is not the way to change things.”

Mr Halfon said the Conservati­ves had a “serious image problem” and warned that voters think the party is just about austerity or Brexit.

But he dismissed suggestion­s it was time to replace the PM.

Labour, meanwhile, warned Mrs May that if she is hoping they will help pass her Brexit blueprint she can “think again”.

Shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer said there is a “real lack of confidence” that Mrs May can bring back “anything by way of a good deal”.

He said it was not in the national interest to back a bad deal.

“What we’re going to see is even if there’s a deal, the Tory Party will try to rip it up next year – some of them are already saying they’re going to do that – so this idea of an historic moment just before Christmas in the national interest isn’t going to happen,” he told Marr.

Meanwhile, the Tory chairman of the Treasury Committee has warned that the UK’s Brexit negotiatio­ns have caused “massive amounts of uncertaint­y” in the City. Nicky Morgan spoke of her concerns that Britain’s departure from the EU trading bloc would cause a gradual chilling effect on investment decisions over the next decade and beyond.

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Theresa May and her husband Philip leave church near to her Maidenhead constituen­cy; Delia Smith addresses Anti-Brexit campaigner­s at a rally in London.
Prime Minister Theresa May and her husband Philip leave church near to her Maidenhead constituen­cy; Delia Smith addresses Anti-Brexit campaigner­s at a rally in London.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom