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MPs can block post-Brexit trade deal with US if it will damage animal welfare standards, Michael Gove says | MPs can block post-Brexit trade deal with US if it will damage animal welfare standards, Michael Gove says |
(35 minutes later) | |
MPs will have the power to block a post-Brexit trade deal with the US if they believe it will damage animal welfare standards, Michael Gove says. | MPs will have the power to block a post-Brexit trade deal with the US if they believe it will damage animal welfare standards, Michael Gove says. |
The Environment Secretary vowed to argue against any agreement that would open the door to chlorine-soaked chickens, for example – insisting he had Cabinet support. | The Environment Secretary vowed to argue against any agreement that would open the door to chlorine-soaked chickens, for example – insisting he had Cabinet support. |
But Mr Gove pledged that, regardless, Parliament – not the Government – would decide whether to plough ahead with a US deal, the dream of Tory hard Brexit supporters. | But Mr Gove pledged that, regardless, Parliament – not the Government – would decide whether to plough ahead with a US deal, the dream of Tory hard Brexit supporters. |
“I think if Parliament wanted to, it could stop the Government signing a trade deal,” he told the Commons environment select committee. | “I think if Parliament wanted to, it could stop the Government signing a trade deal,” he told the Commons environment select committee. |
Mr Gove insisted chlorine-washed chickens were “perfectly safe to eat” – but suggested the way they were reared is “crueller” | Mr Gove insisted chlorine-washed chickens were “perfectly safe to eat” – but suggested the way they were reared is “crueller” |
“In America they cannot guarantee the same high standards in terms of how chickens are reared that we insist on here,” he told MPs. | |
“Unless there is a change in the American side we would say that those animal welfare rules are things on which we will not compromise. | |
“The whole point about trade deals is that you have got to be assertive in defence of your own interests.” | |
The Environment Secretary was also asked how the Government would achieve its hopes for “frictionless trade” in Ireland, to avoid a hard land border. | The Environment Secretary was also asked how the Government would achieve its hopes for “frictionless trade” in Ireland, to avoid a hard land border. |
Neil Parish, the committee’s Conservative chairman, urged him to set out how the work was progressing, warning “otherwise this frictionless border is not going to work”. | Neil Parish, the committee’s Conservative chairman, urged him to set out how the work was progressing, warning “otherwise this frictionless border is not going to work”. |
“If we are outside the customs union, how are we going to get those lorries in and out with food that will go off?” he asked. | “If we are outside the customs union, how are we going to get those lorries in and out with food that will go off?” he asked. |
But Mr Gove was only able to say that ministers held “weekly meetings”, at which they discussed a “range of scenarios”. | But Mr Gove was only able to say that ministers held “weekly meetings”, at which they discussed a “range of scenarios”. |
In the Brexit negotiations, Theresa May agreed to “full alignment” of regulations needed to avoid a hard border, if no technological solution can be found, to apply across the UK. | |
Mr Gove denied that meant “full harmonisation”, arguing it was an “agreement to achieve the same goals by different means”. | |
Later, asked about the Cabinet debate on what sort of Brexit the Government will aim for after a transitional period, he claimed there was “absolute full alignment”. | |
Earlier this year, Trade Secretary Liam Fox appeared to open up a Cabinet split when he dismissed protests that US farmers use chemical washes to make up for inadequate hygiene on farms and abattoirs. | |
Other concerns surround the US practice of pumping beef full of hormones and growing genetically modified crops. |
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