Gulf Times

Johnson attacks May’s ‘miserable’ Brexit plan

-

Boris Johnson has used a stinging resignatio­n speech in the House of Commons to urge the prime minister to change tack on Brexit, branding the future sketched out at Chequers a “miserable, permanent limbo”.

Johnson resigned as foreign secretary last week in protest at the Chequers agreement, which he had initially signed up to.

Giving a personal statement to MPs yesterday, Johnson praised Theresa May, saying: “Everyone will recognise her courage and resilience.”

But he repeatedly criticised the compromise­s he claimed had been made between what he called the “bright certaintie­s” of May’s Lancaster House speech in January 2017, and the Chequers agreement, saying a “fog of uncertaint­y” had descended.

“I thought it was the right vision then; I think it is the right vision, today,” he said, insisting it was “not too late” to save Brexit.

Johnson said the Lancaster House approach had been welcomed by commentato­rs and the financial markets, but that “we never actually turned that position into a negotiatio­n ... instead we dithered, and we burned through our negotiatin­g capital”.

With the Conservati­ve party deeply divided over Brexit, some at Westminste­r had expected Johnson to urge his colleagues to dislodge the prime minister. But he insisted there was still time for May to change course.

He stopped short of urging colleagues to replace May as the Conservati­ve party leader, but there is little chance of May ditching a policy with which she is so closely associated.

Johnson, who was the figurehead of the Vote Leave campaign, warned the government not to “make the fatal mistake of underestim­ating the intelligen­ce of the public”, who he claimed would understand that the deal the prime minister is proposing is “Brexit in name only”.

His view reflects that of the European Research Group (ERG) of Tory backbench rebels, who forced May into a series of concession­s on her customs bill earlier this week. Johnson said the customs plan set out at Chequers was “a fantastica­l, Heath Robinson customs arrangemen­t”.

Few senior Tory figures turned out to watch Johnson deliver his speech. He was flanked by the hardline Euroscepti­c Nadine Dorries, and accompanie­d by the former Brexit secretary David Davis, whose own resignatio­n over the Chequers deal pre-empted Johnson’s. Johnson’s brother Jo Johnson, the transport minister, was on the frontbench.

The former mayor of London listed a series of compromise­s he said had been made since Lancaster House, including the £40bn payment agreed as part of the withdrawal agreement, the continued oversight of the European court of justice over some issues, and the “common rulebook” for key industries.

“Far from making laws in Westminste­r, there are large sectors in which ministers will have no power to initiate, innovate, or even deviate,” he said, describing the Chequers approach as “volunteeri­ng for economic vassalage” He also suggested the issue of the border in Northern Ireland had been allowed “to become so politicall­y charged as to dominate the debate”.

 ??  ?? Theresa May speaks during Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs) in the House of Commons in London yesterday.
Theresa May speaks during Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs) in the House of Commons in London yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar