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Jeremy Corbyn risks being 'midwife of hard Brexit', warns David Miliband | Jeremy Corbyn risks being 'midwife of hard Brexit', warns David Miliband |
(35 minutes later) | |
Jeremy Corbyn will be the “midwife of a hard Brexit” that will harm Britain’s poorest unless he fights to stay in the EU single market, David Miliband has warned. | Jeremy Corbyn will be the “midwife of a hard Brexit” that will harm Britain’s poorest unless he fights to stay in the EU single market, David Miliband has warned. |
The former Labour foreign secretary – launching a new cross-party campaign to soften the exit terms – said his own party must shift its stance, or punish its own natural supporters. | The former Labour foreign secretary – launching a new cross-party campaign to soften the exit terms – said his own party must shift its stance, or punish its own natural supporters. |
The crucial decision about whether the UK stays in the single market is now effectively in Mr Corbyn’s hands, ahead of a crunch Commons vote – prompting Mr Miliband to urge him to give his backing. | The crucial decision about whether the UK stays in the single market is now effectively in Mr Corbyn’s hands, ahead of a crunch Commons vote – prompting Mr Miliband to urge him to give his backing. |
“The warning for Jeremy Corbyn is that, if he is not very careful, he will be the midwife of a hard Brexit that threatens the living standards of the very people that he says he wants to represent,” he said. | |
The single market was about workers' rights, as well as trade, he argued, warning: “This is an issue for MPs and leaders of all parties, because the stakes could not be higher. This goes beyond party politics - it’s more important than party politics.” | |
The House of Lords voted to make keeping the UK inside the European Economic Area (EEA), and therefore the single market, a negotiating priority – throwing the decision back to MPs. | The House of Lords voted to make keeping the UK inside the European Economic Area (EEA), and therefore the single market, a negotiating priority – throwing the decision back to MPs. |
But Labour remains opposed, while vowing to negotiate a “strong single market relationship that hard wires the benefits”, without explaining how that will be possible outside the trading bloc. | But Labour remains opposed, while vowing to negotiate a “strong single market relationship that hard wires the benefits”, without explaining how that will be possible outside the trading bloc. |
Mr Miliband was speaking ahead of sharing a platform with Nicky Morgan, the former Conservative education secretary, and Nick Clegg, the former Liberal Democrat deputy prime minister. | Mr Miliband was speaking ahead of sharing a platform with Nicky Morgan, the former Conservative education secretary, and Nick Clegg, the former Liberal Democrat deputy prime minister. |
The trio are warning that Britain is being “held to ransom” by hardline Tories hell bent on a hard Brexit, in the starkest evidence yet that party allegiances are breaking down as battle rages over departure from the EU. | The trio are warning that Britain is being “held to ransom” by hardline Tories hell bent on a hard Brexit, in the starkest evidence yet that party allegiances are breaking down as battle rages over departure from the EU. |
Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Mr Miliband dismissed chatter about a new centrist party, saying his campaign was pushing for “cross-party working, not for creating new party”. | |
Bitter cabinet splits made it a “national crisis”, he warned, adding: “The UK has no negotiating position on the fundamental issues that face the country as it contemplates its post-Brexit relationship with the European Union.” | |
He predicted an “enormous sigh of relief in Europe” if Britain stayed in the single market, because the EU “don’t want a weakened Britain, because that think it will weaken Europe”. | |
The so-called “Norway option” was now “on the table”, after that country’s prime minister made clear it would welcome the UK staying in the EEA. | |
Mr Miliband, who runs a UN charity in New York, said he was also watching close-up as America, under Donald Trump, turns away from Europe. “We have to take that into account,” he said. | |
And he rejected Brexiteer protests that revolts in parliament weakened Britain’s negotiating hand, arguing: “What’s more destructive for a government position than having no position?” | |
The three prominent politicians are calling on MPs to stand up to “the hardest of Brexits”, on “a fantasy island” of “economic pain” and diminished standing | |
“Over the coming months, MPs will have the chance to table amendments to Bills - and vote for those amendments - which can prevent the country from suffering the long-term damage that a hard Brexit will cause,” they wrote at the weekend. | |
“The pro-Brexit press will angrily protest, but what is the role of MPs if not to improve and protect the lives of their constituents?” |