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Boris Johnson resigns as foreign secretary, throwing Brexit into disarray – politics live | |
(35 minutes later) | |
This is from Sky’s Beth Rigby. | |
Nasty this; told Boris Johnson informed No 10 earlier that he was going to resign this evening & they put out statement. “They think they’re terribly clever” said a friend. | |
Iain Duncan Smith, the Conservative former party leader and Brexiter, asks if any concessions will be offered to the EU. | |
May says when the white paper is published Duncan Smith will see that it contains some areas, such as involvement in agencies, where there will have to be a negotiation. | |
May says Corbyn was supposed to ask some questions, but that he did not actually do so. | |
On standards, May says the government is committed to maintaining high regulatory standards for the environment, climate change, social and employment, and consumer protection. | |
On the subject of resignations, she says Corbyn has had 103 resignations from his front bench. So she will take no lectures from him. | |
She says Labour can’t speak about economic policy. Their policies would lead to a run on the pound. | |
Jeremy Corbyn says the cabinet Brexit deal took two years to negotiate and two days to unravel. | |
He mocks May’s claim that she has restored cabinet collective responsibility. | |
He says he understands why ministers did not resign on Friday; their phones were removed, they would have lost their cars, and, because of government cuts, there would have been no bus services. | |
Turning to Dominic Raab, the new Brexit secretary, Corbyn says Raab is on record as favouring reducing rights. (There is more on Raab’s views in this Guardian article from six years ago.) | |
Corbyn says jobs are at risk from Brexit. They should not be a sub-plot in a Tory civil war. He says we need a government than can negotiate on behalf of Britain. And if they can’t, “they should make way for those who can”. | |
Number 10 has announced two promotions. | |
Kat Malthouse, a work and pensions minister, replaces Dominic Raab as the new housing minister. | |
And Chris Heaton-Harris becomes a junior minister at the Brexit department, replacing Steve Baker. | |
Since the referendum there has been “a spirited national debate” on Brexit. | |
She has listened to every possible idea, she says. She says this is the right one to pursue. | |
May confirms the government white paper on Brexit will be published on Thursday. | |
May says her proposals are consistent with what the Conservative manifesto promised. | |
She goes on: | |
What we are proposing is challenging for the EU. | |
That triggers laughter. | |
She says her plan would require the EU to think again. | |
Back in the Commons May says 96% of businesses would not face extra bureaucracy for the government’s new customs plan, a facilitated customs arrangement. | |
She says some people have said the UK would not be able to strike trade deals under her plan. That is wrong, she says. | |
Here is Sir Vince Cable, the Lib Dem leader, on Boris Johnson’s resignation. | |
He might have taken time to pluck up the courage to join his hard Brexiter colleagues, but Boris Johnson’s resignation completely destroys the Conservative position.It's not too late. We can exit from Brexit - add your name today: https://t.co/QmgPvjx5jN | |
May says the friction-free movement of goods is the only way to avoid a hard border in Ireland, and a border between Ireland and Britain, and the only way to protect supply chains. | |
She says she is proposing four steps that will enable this. | |
These are set out in the three-page government document (pdf) published on Friday night. | |
She says the EU goods regulation that the UK would have to accept are relatively stable. There would be a parliamentary lock on any new laws, she says. | |
She says parliament would be able to reject any proposals if it wanted, recognising that there would be consequences. | |
May is now summarising her Brexit plan. | |
She says the two models proposed by the EU are unacceptable. She says no prime minister could accept a plan that would separate Northern Ireland from the rest of the UK. | |
And she says keeping the whole of the UK in the single market and customs union would mean accepting free movement, having to follow EU law and having to go on paying huge sums to Europe. | |
She says if the EU continues on its current course, that could lead to a no deal Brexit. | |
A responsible government must prepare for a range of outcomes, including no deal, she says. | |
But a no deal would have profound consequences for the UK and the EU. | |
So the cabinet agreed to propose a new model, she says. | |
Theresa May gets a loud cheer as she stands up. | |
She starts by expressing her condolences to the family and friends of the novichok victim, Dawn Sturgess, who has died. | |
Then she thanks David Davis and Boris Johnson for their work. She thanks Davis for what he did steering Brexit legislation through the Commons. And she pays tribute to the “passion” showed in promoting a global Britain to the world. | |
Donald Tusk, the president of the European council, is wondering aloud whether the UK might reject Brexit. | |
Politicians come and go but the problems they have created for people remain. I can only regret that the idea of #Brexit has not left with Davis and Johnson. But...who knows? | |
This is from the Evening Standard’s Jim Armitage. | This is from the Evening Standard’s Jim Armitage. |
Just when you thought the govt might not totally screw up brexit, Boris resigns. Sterling sighs in resignation. pic.twitter.com/8usYMadzq6 | Just when you thought the govt might not totally screw up brexit, Boris resigns. Sterling sighs in resignation. pic.twitter.com/8usYMadzq6 |
This is from the Guido Fawkes website. | This is from the Guido Fawkes website. |
Source: Permanent Secretary and SpAds have just been called into Liam Fox's office at DIT. | Source: Permanent Secretary and SpAds have just been called into Liam Fox's office at DIT. |
This is from the Spectator’s James Forsyth. | This is from the Spectator’s James Forsyth. |
Understand that Boris now thinks that ‘no deal’ would be better than the Chequers plan. We’re about to find out how many Tory MPs agree with him https://t.co/VZ6DpG6gxz | Understand that Boris now thinks that ‘no deal’ would be better than the Chequers plan. We’re about to find out how many Tory MPs agree with him https://t.co/VZ6DpG6gxz |
The government is in “complete and utter chaos”, Tom Watson, Labour’s deputy leader, has said. | The government is in “complete and utter chaos”, Tom Watson, Labour’s deputy leader, has said. |
Tom Watson MP, Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, responding to Boris Johnson’s resignation, said: “Theresa May’s Government is in meltdown. This is complete and utter chaos." | Tom Watson MP, Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, responding to Boris Johnson’s resignation, said: “Theresa May’s Government is in meltdown. This is complete and utter chaos." |
Boris Johnson is about to leave his official residence at Carlton Gardens, the BBC reports. | Boris Johnson is about to leave his official residence at Carlton Gardens, the BBC reports. |