Theresa May headed for Cabinet showdown over Brexit
BY Agencies13 May 2018 7:17 PM GMT
Agencies13 May 2018 7:17 PM GMT
London: British Prime Minister Theresa May on Sunday made a plea for unity as she faces a major showdown with her Cabinet over the nature of a post-Brexit customs arrangement with the European Union (EU). She seems to be headed for deadlock as prominent Brexiteers within her team have rubbished her proposal of a so-called "customs partnership", under which the UK would collect tariffs on behalf the EU after it has left the union.
A second proposal centres around a more technology-driven system of minimum customs checks dubbed "maximum facilitation" which is favoured by some members of the Cabinet over the other.
But there appears to be no consensus in sight for the British prime minister to progress on the issue.
You can trust me to deliver. The path I am setting out is the path to deliver the Brexit people voted for. I will not let you down, she writes in 'The Sunday Times'. Of course, the details are incredibly complex and, as in any negotiation, there will have to be compromises. But if we stick to the task we will seize this once in a generation opportunity to build a stronger, fairer Britain that is respected around the world and confident and united at home, she adds.
Her intervention came after tensions in the Cabinet emerged into the public domain last week as UK foreign secretary Boris Johnson, a staunch Brexiteer, launched an attack on May's preferred option for a post-Brexit EU customs partnership. He dismissed the proposal as "crazy", saying it would deny Britain control over its trade policy.
UK environment secretary Michael Gove, also from the Brexit camp in the Cabinet, went on to cast doubt over the proposal today as well.
"Because it is novel, because no model like this exists, there have to be significant question marks over the deliverability of it on time," Gove said.
"More than that, what it requires the British government to do is, in effect, act as the tax collector... for the European Union...It is my view that the new customs partnership has flaws and that they need to be tested," he added.
Keir Starmer, from the Opposition Labour party which favours remaining within a customs union with the EU post-Brexit, said as neither of the options were "workable nor acceptable to the EU" and, with time running out, UK Parliament must force the government's hand by backing a "comprehensive" customs union. May has insisted that the final Brexit deal must honour the agreements in the Northern Ireland peace process and not create any hard border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK, creating the prospect of impasse over the issue.
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