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Brexit: Theresa May says she 'will not be derailed' Brexit: Theresa May says she 'will not be derailed'
(about 4 hours later)
The prime minister has said the government is "proving the doubters wrong" with its Brexit negotiations.The prime minister has said the government is "proving the doubters wrong" with its Brexit negotiations.
EU leaders have agreed talks can move on to the next stage in the new year, but Theresa May also suffered her first Commons defeat on Brexit this week. EU leaders agreed talks can move on to the next stage in the new year, shortly after Theresa May suffered her first Commons defeat on Brexit.
Writing in two Sunday papers, she vowed she would "not be derailed" from securing an "ambitious" deal.Writing in two Sunday papers, she vowed she would "not be derailed" from securing an "ambitious" deal.
Meanwhile, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has warned the UK cannot mirror EU law in the long term. Labour's Diane Abbott told the BBC the Brexit negotiations were "a mess" and were causing concern.
Cabinet ministers are due to discuss their stance on the relationship they want with the EU - the UK's "end state" - in the coming days, but some ministers are thought to favour a closer alignment than that suggested by Mr Johnson.
Writing in the Sunday Telegraph and Sunday Express, Mrs May said the last 10 days had "marked a watershed" in the Brexit process and that the government would now "begin to build that new, deep and special partnership" with the EU.Writing in the Sunday Telegraph and Sunday Express, Mrs May said the last 10 days had "marked a watershed" in the Brexit process and that the government would now "begin to build that new, deep and special partnership" with the EU.
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"This is the exciting part of the negotiations and there is no limit on our ambition and creativity," she said."This is the exciting part of the negotiations and there is no limit on our ambition and creativity," she said.
She said talks would now start on the implementation period for Brexit and the future of trading relationships.She said talks would now start on the implementation period for Brexit and the future of trading relationships.
"Amid all the noise, we are getting on with the job," she added."Amid all the noise, we are getting on with the job," she added.
BBC political correspondent Chris Mason said Mrs May had suffered a double embarrassment in the last two weeks of an aborted attempt at a deal with Brussels - scuppered by Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party - and then the Commons defeat. Cabinet ministers are due to discuss their stance on the relationship they want with the EU - the UK's "end state" - in the coming days, but some ministers are thought to favour a closer alignment than others.
He said she was now striking a defiant tone in her newspaper columns but her challenge in 2018 would be to keep her party, and the country, on side as the negotiations continued. Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, who was a leading voice in the referendum Leave campaign, has argued that the UK cannot mirror EU law in the long term.
Meanwhile, Brexiteer Mr Johnson's comments in a Sunday Times interview echoed those of his fellow Conservative MP Jacob Rees Mogg, who said on Friday the arrangements the EU had proposed for the transition period would make the UK "a vassal" - or subordinate - state of the EU. The EU's guidelines for phase two of the negotiations say the UK would "continue to participate in the customs union and the single market during the transition" - a period of up to two years after the UK leaves the EU in March 2019 - and remain under the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice.
The EU's guidelines for phase two of the negotiations say the UK would "continue to participate in the customs union and the single market during the transition" and remain under the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice.
Mr Johnson said if the UK ended up being forced to mirror EU laws "we would have gone from being a member state to a vassal state".Mr Johnson said if the UK ended up being forced to mirror EU laws "we would have gone from being a member state to a vassal state".
He said the UK needed "something new and ambitious, which allows zero tariffs and frictionless trade" but maintains the freedom to "decide our own regulatory framework and own laws", he said. Norway-style deal
He said the UK needed "something new and ambitious, which allows zero tariffs and frictionless trade" but maintains the freedom to "decide our own regulatory framework and own laws".
Speaking on BBC One's Andrew Marr Show, Work and Pensions Secretary David Gauke said any final trade deal between the UK and EU must "maximise" access to the EU market.
"We are not looking for an EEA -type (European Economic Area) arrangement so that, essentially, it's continuity as far as the end state is concerned," he said.
"But it is also important that we maximise our access to the European markets, that is really important to the UK."
Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott was asked whether Labour would back a Norway-style deal for the UK.
Norway is not in the EU but has access to the single market, in return for a financial contribution and accepting the majority of EU laws.
She said Labour was "not conducting this negotiation" but it would not back anything "that damages jobs and the economy".
Pressed on whether the UK may have to make payments to get access to the single market, she replied: "We may have to do so, but we have to see how the Tories' negotiations go".
Death threatsDeath threats
Meanwhile, two Tory peers have warned Mrs May she could face defeats in the House of Lords if the government tried to "bully" its members. Meanwhile, two Conservative peers have warned Mrs May she could face defeats in the House of Lords if the government tried to "bully" its members.
The prime minister lost in the Commons earlier this week when MPs - including 11 from her own party - voted to give Parliament a legal guarantee of a vote on the final Brexit deal struck with Brussels.The prime minister lost in the Commons earlier this week when MPs - including 11 from her own party - voted to give Parliament a legal guarantee of a vote on the final Brexit deal struck with Brussels.
Following the vote there were calls for the Tory rebels to be deselected by the party and some received death threats. Following the vote, there were calls for the Tory rebels to be deselected by the party and some received death threats.
Tory peers, Baroness Altmann and Baroness Wheatcroft, have written in the Observer that such threats "are worrying symptoms of the toxic atmosphere which has been created in our country". Tory peers Baroness Altmann and Baroness Wheatcroft have written in the Observer that such threats "are worrying symptoms of the toxic atmosphere which has been created in our country".
"Mindful of the monumental importance for future generations of getting Brexit right, the Lords is unlikely to be receptive to bullying over a restricted timetable or vigorous whipping to toe the party line," they added."Mindful of the monumental importance for future generations of getting Brexit right, the Lords is unlikely to be receptive to bullying over a restricted timetable or vigorous whipping to toe the party line," they added.