Daily Mail

The return of Project Fear! Business minister accused of stoking panic on Brexit

- By Jason Groves Political Editor j.groves@dailymail.co.uk

BUSINESS Secretary Greg Clark was accused of ‘communicat­ing a sense of panic’ last night as he urged big business to keep speaking out against plans for a clean break with the EU.

In a revealing interventi­on, Mr Clark said big business could help him win the argument in Cabinet to soften the Government’s approach to Brexit.

But David Jones, a former Brexit minister, told The Daily Telegraph: ‘Cabinet ministers should be informing business of what the Government is doing to ensure we get a good deal.

‘This is ridiculous. You don’t take your lead from businesses, you set the policy and then inform the debate. ‘What he is doing is communicat­ing a sense of panic, rather than a sense of reassuranc­e. There is a risk he is unwittingl­y participat­ing in Project Fear Mark II, which is being orchestrat­ed by EU-based businesses.’

Recent blood-curdling Brexit warnings from foreign-based corporatio­ns such as Airbus and, temporaril­y, BMW have enraged some Cabinet ministers.

Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said it was ‘completely inappropri­ate’ for Airbus to threaten to leave the UK in the event of a no deal Brexit – and said similar warnings were underminin­g Theresa May’s efforts to strike a good trade deal with Brussels.

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson was blunter, reportedly responding to business concerns with: ‘F*** business.’

Speaking at a conference for chief executives in London yesterday, Mr Clark said: ‘The voice of business... must continue to be heard (in the Brexit debate). The business voice is absolutely foundation­al to a successful and effective negotiatio­n.’

The Business Secretary acknowledg­ed that the Cabinet’s public rows about Brexit were damaging, saying: ‘ What business doesn’t want is a running debate between different members of the same government.

‘Businesses look with dismay when there’s disagreeme­nt, it does not inspire confidence.’

But he said it was vital that firms continued to provide ‘evidence’ to back his case for a softer Brexit ahead of a crunch meeting of the Cabinet at Chequers next week. ‘Evidence and facts are what will determine the outcome at every stage,’ he said.

‘When things have been up for debate and discussion it’s been the evidence that has prevailed. The business voice puts evidence first before ideology. It brings actual experience of trading. Not a theoretica­l view of what the world will be like.

‘Not a speculatio­n on how they might operate.

‘The experience of employing millions of men and women and helping them earn a good living, not a theoretica­l exercise in which you take decisions about the lives of people in imagined circumstan­ces in imagined worlds.’

‘Does not inspire confidence’

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