The Scotsman

Hammond: ‘Britain is not yet in a position to start

- By PAUL WILSON

Britain is not yet in a position to start negotiatio­ns on its exit from the European Union, Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond has said.

Following the 23 June vote in favour of Brexit, London has come under pressure from the EU institutio­ns to kick off the process of negotiatin­g its departure under Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty.

But Mr Hammond told the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee that invoking Article 50 would set the clock ticking on a two-year deadline for the UK to quit, and it would be “unwise” to do so until the government had decided on its negotiatin­g position and was prepared to fight its corner.

The Foreign Secretary defended the government’s decision to make no contingenc­y plans for a Brexit vote, beyond measures to calm nerves in the financial markets in the immediate aftermath of the result.

Committee chairman Crispin Blunt said it was a “serious oversight” for the government to leave the country uncertain for months after the referendum about what its future would be after Brexit.

Mr Hammond said he was “not sure I see the need” for contingenc­y plans, as the new European policy would be for the next prime minister to decide after her election in September. Any prereferen­dum planning by the civil service would have been denounced by the Leave camp as an “unwarrante­d interventi­on” in the campaign, he said.

The Foreign Secretary said: “It will be for the new prime minister to decide how best to engage with the European Union and to express to the European Union our views as a government about how we

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