Kuwait Times

UK PM Johnson rejects calls for no-deal Brexit

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LONDON: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson drew an angry backlash from Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage after he rejected calls to drop his Brexit deal and embrace a clean break from the European Union, potentiall­y splitting the euroscepti­c vote. Johnson had previously pledged to take Britain out of the EU with or without a deal on Oct 31, before lawmakers voted to force him to seek an extension until Jan 31. But he has abandoned the threat of a no-deal Brexit in his Conservati­ve Party’s manifesto for the Dec 12 election, the Times newspaper reported on Saturday. It added that the focus would be on getting his Brexit deal approved.

On Friday, Johnson rejected a call from the Brexit Party to drop the deal he negotiated with the European Union last month in order to form a new electoral pact, saying that he could put his deal through parliament after any election win. “What we’ve got is a fantastic deal that nobody thought we could get,” Johnson said. “As soon as we get back in the middle of December, we can put that deal through.”

In Britain’s tortuous journey since the 2016 referendum vote to leave the EU, businesses and economists have cautioned that leaving the bloc without a deal to smooth the transition would hurt the British economy. Proponents of a no-deal Brexit say it provides a clean break from EU rules and regulation­s. “If The Times are right and Boris Johnson will abandon a clean break Brexit, and he wins an election on this, we will never be free of EU rules,” Brexit Party Leader

Nigel Farage said in a tweet. “The deal is simply not Brexit and does not get Brexit done.” The Conservati­ve manifesto will also not include a commitment to a fiscal rule, the Times reported, relaxing the government’s grip on public finances. The party did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. The government’s previous fiscal rule pledged to hold the underlying budget deficit below 2% of the country’s economic output in the 2020/21 financial year. — Reuters

 ??  ?? LONDON: A combinatio­n of pictures created shows Britain’s Prime Minister and Conservati­ve Party leader Boris Johnson (left) and Britain’s main opposition Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn giving speeches. Britain will go to the polls on December 12, 2019 to vote in a preChristm­as general election. — AFP
LONDON: A combinatio­n of pictures created shows Britain’s Prime Minister and Conservati­ve Party leader Boris Johnson (left) and Britain’s main opposition Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn giving speeches. Britain will go to the polls on December 12, 2019 to vote in a preChristm­as general election. — AFP

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