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You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/oct/09/pro-brexit-minister-penny-mordaunt-refuses-to-explicitly-back-mays-chequers-plan
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Pro-Brexit minister refuses to explicitly back Chequers plan | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Penny Mordaunt has refused to explicitly back Theresa May’s Chequers plan for Brexit, increasing pressure on the government not to make dramatic concessions to Brussels in the crucial days ahead. | |
The international development secretary said she would not give a “running commentary” on the proposals when asked if she supported them, saying simply that the ball was now “firmly” in the EU’s court on what happened next. | |
However, while Mordaunt insisted the prime minister had her support for now, the pro-Brexit minister raised the possibility that this could be conditional if the final deal looked like an “attempt to derail or fudge” the outcome of the Brexit vote. | |
“The prime minister can count on my support. But what I would say is that we don’t know where this is going to end up. We are at a critical moment now. The ball is firmly back in the EU’s court; we are waiting for them to respond,” she said. | |
In her remarks to an audience of development officials and journalists, Mordaunt also set out plans to privatise a proportion of the £14bn aid budget, effectively cutting the amount of public money that goes into meeting the 0.7% commitment. | |
Mordaunt is one of two leave-voting cabinet ministers who have not yet delivered a public verdict on May’s Chequers plans. Her remarks, which will fuel leadership speculation, following a speech on the future of British aid spending, came as the Brexit secretary, Dominic Raab, prepared to face down mutinous Eurosceptic Conservative MPs in the House of Commons. | |
The former Brexit minister Steve Baker, the vice-chairman of the European Research Group of Brexit-backing MPs, said he believed at least 40 MPs were prepared to vote against the government if the EU agreed a Chequers-type deal. | |
However, cabinet ministers have told the Guardian they expect only between 10 and 20 Brexiter rebels. May has also drawn up plans for a secret charm offensive aimed at persuading dozens of Labour MPs to back her Brexit deal, the final elements of which are being thrashed out in Brussels. | |
Mordaunt said: “I think we need to let the prime minister and her negotiating team get on with it and I’m supporting her in doing that, I think that’s in the national interest. So I’m not going to give a running commentary on that.” | |
In a pointed remark at the former foreign secretary Boris Johnson, a potential leadership rival, and the former Brexit secretary David Davis, she said: “Other members of the cabinet felt that it was not the best way that they could support, but it was certainly my view that is the best way I can support. | |
“All that matters is where we end up, what that agreement is, and I’m going to do everything I can to ensure that is the best deal possible. I feel very strongly that we must honour the result of the referendum and the expectations of the British public in that. | |
“I think [May] is working absolutely flat out to get our country the best deal possible. I don’t doubt her motives, I don’t doubt her commitment and I don’t doubt for one moment her understanding that we have to deliver a good Brexit; we have to honour that result. So she has my support and I am not in any way expecting that situation to change.” | |
Penny Mordaunt | Penny Mordaunt |
Brexit | Brexit |
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European Union | European Union |
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