Monday, 22 October 2018

extending Brexit transition beyond 2020 would be a last resort with deal '95 per cent' complete

Theresa May said the Government must hold its nerve
Pic: Theresa May said the Government must hold its nerve (wp )
Political reporter(wp/es):
Theresa May has said the Government must hold its nerve as Brexit negotiations entered their final stages.
The Prime Minister addressed the Commons to say that the Tories must "not give in to those who want to stop Brexit with a politicians' vote."
She added that she "did not want nor expect to extend the Brexit transition period past the end of 2020."
Mrs May added that there may be circumstances in which a short extension to the transition period after Britain leaves the EU is a preferable option.
However, in a statement to the Commons, she said the transition period would have to be completed well before the end of the parliament in June 2022.
"There are some limited circumstances in which it could be argued that an extension to the implementation period might be preferable if we were certain it was only for a short time," she said.
"A short extension to the implementation period would mean only one set of changes for businesses at the point we move to the future relationship.
"But in any such scenario we would have to be out of this implementation period well before the end of this parliament."
Mrs May added: "The Brexit talks are not about my interests, they are about the national interest.
"And the interest of the whole of the United Kingdom. Serving our national interest will demand that we hold our nerve through these last stages of the negotiations - the hardest part of all.
"It will mean not giving in to those who want to stop Brexit with a politicians' vote.
"Politicians telling the people they got it wrong the first time and should try again."
In her highly-anticipated statement on Brexit, the Prime Minister said that 95% of  the Brexit withdrawal agreement had been completed and "broad agreement on structure and scope" of future relations with EU was reached.
However Jeremy Corbyn said the government was hamstrung by its own divisions, and that the Prime Minister was "losing control."
Mrs May also condemned the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi and demanded answers about his death.
The Prime Minister's comments came before a statement on the case by Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt.
Mrs May told MPs: "I am sure the whole House will join me in condemning the killing of Jamal Khashoggi in the strongest possible terms.
"We must get to the truth of what happened."
The Prime Minister's remarks in the Commons followed former foreign secretary Boris Johnson urging a robust response to Saudi Arabia over Mr Khashoggi's death.
Britain should "refuse to turn a blind eye" to the murder of the dissident journalist and pressure Saudi Arabia into ending the brutal civil war in Yemen, Mr Johnson said in his Daily Telegraph column.
The former foreign secretary drew parallels between the Istanbul killing and the Novichok attack in Salisbury in March, calling them "state-sponsored plots" designed to "send a terrifying public warning" to opponents.
The Gulf kingdom admitted on Friday that Washington Post columnist Mr Khashoggi, a vocal critic of Riyadh, was killed at its Istanbul consulate but claimed he died after a fight broke out.

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