Big changes coming, vows Brit PM
Johnson lauds Brexit deal and shrugs off criticism as parliamentarians prepare to vote on treaty at long last
This Government has a very clear agenda to use this moment to unite and level up and to spread opportunity across the country. That’s what we want to do. Boris Johnson, British Prime Minister
Boris Johnson promises to break free from European Union rules and regulations in the new year as he declared yesterday it is “up to us now to seize the opportunities” of Brexit.
The British Prime Minister told the Sunday Telegraph “big” changes were coming as he seeks to use the country’s new “legislative and regulatory freedoms to deliver for people who felt left behind”.
Johnson said a “great government effort has gone into compiling” postBrexit policies as he listed animal welfare, data and chemicals as areas where Britain could diverge from Brussels, in addition to plans for low tax “freeports” and abolishing the tampon tax.
In his first interview since signing the trade deal with Brussels on Friday, Johnson also hinted at a potential overhaul of the tax and regulatory environment for businesses. He said Rishi Sunak, the Chancellor, was now conducting a “big exercise on all of this”, suggesting changes could come as early as the Budget in March.
Tory Brexiteers were poring over the treaty at the weekend ahead of a parliamentary sitting this week to vote through the deal.
Johnson sought to downplay any rebellion, saying the treaty “would survive the toughest, most ruthless scrutiny by the scholiasts of the Star Chamber” — referring to the group of lawyers assembled by the European Research Group of Brexiteer MPs.
The Prime Minister scotched suggestions he caved to Brussels in
key areas, revealing there were “several times” when he and Lord David Frost, Britain’s chief Brexit negotiator, concluded “things were going in the wrong direction and that our best bet was to go for no deal”.
The flashpoints included the EU
seeking to retaliate automatically if Britain failed to increase its standards with the bloc over time.
Frost yesterday declared the agreement was a “moment of national renewal” for Britain which “established the UK as a country which sets
its own laws again”. Critics of the deal have suggested it provides the EU with the ability to impose tariffs and erect trade barriers to key industries such as car manufacturing, in order to prevent Britain diverging too far from its rules and standards.
But Johnson yesterday rubbished the claims, arguing that he has triumphed over allegations of “cakeism” and the belief that “you couldn’t do free trade with the EU without being drawn into their regulatory or legislative orbit”.
The Prime Minister signalled he would be ready to rip up the agreement should Brussels “regularly” attempt to take retaliatory action, stating that the “treaty makes it explicit” that the UK can revert to World Trade Organisation terms.
Johnson declared: “We can’t sort of suddenly decide that we’re free and then not decide how to exercise it. This Government has a very clear agenda to use this moment to unite and level up and to spread opportunity across the country. That’s what we want to do.”
Pressed on whether he believed Britain could defy predictions that Brexit will slow economic growth, Johnson said “freedom is what you make of it”.
He added that the deal “does present considerable advantages”, but conceded that the country faced a “very big challenge now with [Covid19]”.