Sunday Sun

More ministers may quit, hints Johnson

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JO Johnson has signalled that more ministers may be poised to quit over Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit plans.

Mr Johnson, whose bombshell resignatio­n as transport minister took Westminste­r by surprise, said if other senior Tories followed suit, “good on them”.

Calling for a second referendum to be held on Brexit, Mr Johnson denounced the choice between Mrs May’s deal plans or a no-deal scenario as a “failure of British statecraft on a scale unseen since the Suez crisis” that had left Britain facing “vassalage” or “chaos”.

Asked whether other ministers should quit over the issue, Mr Johnson told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I think this is so important that it’s up to MPs to take a stand.

“I’ve done so, if others feel that it’s right for them to do so, good on them.” He added: “It’s for each MP to come to his or her own view. “This is one of the most momentous questions we will ever face in our political careers. “And everybody is thinking very hard about it. “Of course I talk to colleagues across Parliament and those conversati­ons always remind me of how deeply MPs think about their responsibi­lities, and I know many are reflecting hard about the deal that’s looming and how they will respond to it. “But it’s obviously for each of them to work out how best to respond to those questions.” Mr Johnson insisted his resignatio­n was not an attempt to oust the PM. “My priority is really just to do my bit as a now backbench MP to try and encourage the country to pause and reflect before we do something that is irrevocabl­y stupid.”

Calling for a new referendum, Mr Johnson said: “My view is that this is so different from what was billed that it would be an absolute travesty if we do not go back to the people and ask them if they actually do want to exit the EU on this extraordin­arily hopeless basis.”

Asked if his brother Boris Johnson had lied to voters during the referendum about Brexit, the former transport minister said: “In the campaign there were undoubtedl­y promises made that have shown to be undelivera­ble. “No one can dispute that.” Mr Johnson said his role as transport minister had caused him concern about the impact of a no-deal outcome.

Mrs May is also under pressure from the DUP over her Brexit plans, as well as Euroscepti­c Tories.

But calls for a second Brexit referendum have been attacked by exfirst secretary of state Damian Green.

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 ??  ?? Former Transport Minister Jo Johnson
Former Transport Minister Jo Johnson

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