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Theresa May under fire for picking ‘hard Brexiteers’ to help control EU exit negotiations | Theresa May under fire for picking ‘hard Brexiteers’ to help control EU exit negotiations |
(35 minutes later) | |
Theresa May has been accused of packing the group of Cabinet ministers which will control EU exit negotiations with “hard Brexiteers”. | Theresa May has been accused of packing the group of Cabinet ministers which will control EU exit negotiations with “hard Brexiteers”. |
The Prime Minister also provoked surprise by failing to allocate a place to the Attorney General – despite the complex legal challenges ahead before EU withdrawal can be delivered. | The Prime Minister also provoked surprise by failing to allocate a place to the Attorney General – despite the complex legal challenges ahead before EU withdrawal can be delivered. |
The makeup of the European Union Exit and Trade Committee had not been released by Downing Street, but was revealed by news website Politico. | |
Its job is to “oversee the negotiations on the withdrawal from the European Union and formation of a new relationship between the United Kingdom and the European Union; and policy on international trade”. | Its job is to “oversee the negotiations on the withdrawal from the European Union and formation of a new relationship between the United Kingdom and the European Union; and policy on international trade”. |
The group includes all six members of Ms May’s Cabinet who campaigned to leave the EU in the referendum. | |
Boris Johnson (Foreign Secretary), Liam Fox (International Trade Secretary) and David Davis (Brexit Secretary) were certain members – but they are joined by Priti Patel (International Development Secretary), Chris Grayling (Transport Secretary) and Andrea Leadsom (Environment Secretary). | Boris Johnson (Foreign Secretary), Liam Fox (International Trade Secretary) and David Davis (Brexit Secretary) were certain members – but they are joined by Priti Patel (International Development Secretary), Chris Grayling (Transport Secretary) and Andrea Leadsom (Environment Secretary). |
Tim Farron, the Liberal Democrat leader, said: “The line-up is full of hard Brexiteers – this is a further sign that the government wants to pull us out in the most aggressive way possible, abandoning the single market. | |
“This is a case of May letting the foxes into the hen-house. She clearly wants to pursue a hard Brexit, putting jobs at risk, and we are seeing costs rise from our shelves to our petrol pumps.” | |
Keir Starmer, Labour’s shadow Brexit Secretary, said the appointments flew in the face of the Prime Minister's claim to want a “national consensus on Brexit”. | |
He said: “The Government need to provide need answers, a plan and guarantee proper parliamentary scrutiny. Theresa May’s decision to pack a key Brexit committee with Ministers committed to a hard Brexit will only fuel fears that she is putting narrow party interest above the national interest.” | |
Ms May has sought to balance the 12-strong committee with five other members who, like her, sided with the Remain campaign to keep Britain in the EU. | Ms May has sought to balance the 12-strong committee with five other members who, like her, sided with the Remain campaign to keep Britain in the EU. |
They are Philip Hammond (Chancellor), Amber Rudd (Home Secretary), Damian Green (Work and Pensions Secretary), Greg Clark (Business Secretary) and Patrick McLoughlin (Conservative Party chairman). | |
The Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish secretaries will attend meetings “as required” but not as a matter of routine, according to the Government document. | |
That omission is certain to draw fire from Nicola Sturgeon, the SNP First Minister, who has demanded an equal say on the withdrawal process. | That omission is certain to draw fire from Nicola Sturgeon, the SNP First Minister, who has demanded an equal say on the withdrawal process. |
The committee’s make-up risks fuelling the concerns of businesses that the Government will pursue a so-called ‘hard Brexit’ – putting immigration controls ahead of access to the EU’s single market. | The committee’s make-up risks fuelling the concerns of businesses that the Government will pursue a so-called ‘hard Brexit’ – putting immigration controls ahead of access to the EU’s single market. |
Fears over the UK’s future relationship with the EU were blamed for the pound’s plunge to a three-decade low against the dollar this week. | Fears over the UK’s future relationship with the EU were blamed for the pound’s plunge to a three-decade low against the dollar this week. |
However, Ms May has long made clear that she will chair the negotiation committee and decisions will also rest on the stance of the other 27 EU nations. | |
Cabinet committees reduce the burden on the full Cabinet, by enabling collective decisions to be taken by a smaller group of ministers. | Cabinet committees reduce the burden on the full Cabinet, by enabling collective decisions to be taken by a smaller group of ministers. |
Meanwhile, the Prime Minister was today meeting Britain’s ambassadors to the other 27 EU member states, to discuss their assessment of the individual countries’ attitudes to Brexit. | |
Since taking office, Ms May has already visited eight EU states – France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Slovakia, Denmark, the Netherlands and Spain – as well as hosting the leaders of Ireland and Cyprus in Downing Street and speaking with the PMs of Luxembourg and Malta at the United Nations in New York. | |
This leaves 15 leaders to meet in the eight weeks before a crucial European Council summit, on 15 December. |