Las Vegas Review-Journal

May’s Brexit plan faces attacks from both sides of her party

- By Jill Lawless The Associated Press

LONDON — British Prime Minister Theresa May’s brief summer holiday from Brexit battles came to a noisy end Monday, as she faced attacks from both sides of her divided Conservati­ve Party.

Archrival Boris Johnson inflamed speculatio­n that he aims to oust May by branding her plan for Brexit “a disaster.”

Johnson fumed in a newspaper column that May’s proposal to retain close economic ties with the European Union after Brexit would leave Britain locked in the trunk of a Brussels-driven car with “no say on the destinatio­n.”

Meanwhile, a more pro-eu Conservati­ve faction argued that the U.K. should keep even closer bonds with the bloc than May is proposing, at least temporaril­y.

Lawmaker Damian Green, an ally of May, conceded the prime minister was in a tight spot.

“The government is walking a narrow path with people chucking rocks from both sides,” he told the BBC.

Johnson, who resigned as foreign secretary in July after feuding with May over Brexit, used his weekly column in the Daily Telegraph newspaper to accuse May of surrenderi­ng to the EU in divorce negotiatio­ns.

Johnson said that Britain has “gone into battle with the white flag fluttering over our leading tank” and had agreed to pay a $51 billion divorce bill in return “for two-thirds of diddly squat.”

Britain is due to leave the EU in March, but negotiatio­ns have stalled amid divisions within May’s Conservati­ve government over how close an economic relationsh­ip to seek with EU.

A proposal hammered out by May’s Cabinet in July at the prime minister’s Chequers country retreat proposes keeping the U.K. aligned to EU regulation­s in return for free trade in goods. The plan infuriated Brexit-backers including Johnson, who quit the government in protest. Johnson claims the Chequers plan would prevent the U.K. from striking new trade deals around the world.

“We will remain in the EU taxi; but this time locked in the boot (trunk), with absolutely no say on the destinatio­n,” Johnson wrote. “We won’t have taken back control — we will have lost control.”

May’s official spokesman, James Slack, dismissed Johnson’s attack, saying there were “no new ideas in this article to respond to.”

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Boris Johnson

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