The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Javid refuses to rule out delaying Brexit beyond October

TORIES: Sam Gyimah becomes 13th candidate to join leadership race

- HARRIET LINE

Tory leadership hopeful Sajid Javid has refused to rule out extending Britain’s departure from the European Union beyond the end of October.

The home secretary, who is among 13 candidates vying to replace Theresa May, said he did not want to delay Brexit but would not ignore Parliament if it forced his hand.

It follows reports that Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove told colleagues he is prepared to delay Brexit until the end of next year rather than leave without a deal on October 31.

“I’m clear that my plan would be to leave on October 31. I want to leave with a deal but if I have to choose between no deal and no Brexit I would pick no deal,” Mr Javid told BBC1’s The Andrew Marr Show.

Pressed on the matter, he said: “That’s not something I would do, but we are a parliament­ary democracy and what we’ve seen in the last few months is Parliament has taken on some extraordin­ary powers to initiate its own legislatio­n so if it’s statute, if it’s the law, I would not break the law if I was prime minister, of course I would observe the law.”

The Cabinet minister also said he had been working with the Border Force to find an alternativ­e arrangemen­t to the controvers­ial Irish backstop to prevent a hard border between Northern Ireland and the Republic.

He said: “In my department at the moment I’ve got Border Force and we’ve done work for months on what an alternativ­e to that arrangemen­t could look like and what’s missing is that good will.

“What I would do is make a grand gesture to Ireland that we would cover all their costs – the upfront costs, the running costs – of a new digitised border.

“I think it could be done in a couple of years but I think we could cover their costs.”

Mr Javid’s comments came as Andrea Leadsom, whose resignatio­n as Commons leader triggered the PM’s departure, said she would not seek to renegotiat­e Mrs May’s deal and vowed to leave the EU by the end of October in a “managed exit”.

She said she would not take Britain out of the EU without a deal, instead insisting she would follow her “threestep plan for a managed exit”.

“I think it’s based on the premise that, number one, we have to leave the EU at the end of October, and, number two, the Withdrawal Agreement Bill is dead – the EU won’t reopen the Withdrawal Agreement and the UK Parliament won’t vote for it,” she told Marr.

Mrs Leadsom also ruled out holding a general election this year and said she would not support a second referendum or an alliance with the Brexit Party.

Meanwhile, Justice Secretary David Gauke said he would support Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary Rory Stewart in the race to replace Mrs May, saying he had “real strengths” in being an unconventi­onal candidate.

Mr Gauke also said he would not be able to serve in a cabinet which pursued leaving without a deal as its “objective”.

Former universiti­es minister Sam Gyimah became the latest Tory MP to announce his intention to replace Mrs May. Brexit Party MEP Ann Widdecombe said the Tories, her former party, had “gone mad” in fielding so many candidates.

 ?? Picture: Getty. ?? Home Secretary Sajid Javid on The Andrew Marr Show yesterday.
Picture: Getty. Home Secretary Sajid Javid on The Andrew Marr Show yesterday.
 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Sam Gyimah.
Picture: PA. Sam Gyimah.

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