Prime Minister's statement to the Commons on Brexit
With permission, Mr Speaker, I would like to make a statement on
the Government’s work to secure a Withdrawal Agreement that can
command the support of this House. A fortnight ago I
committed to come back before the House today if the Government had
not by now secured a majority for a Withdrawal Agreement and a
Political Declaration. In the two weeks since, my Rt Hon
Friends the Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, the
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With permission, Mr Speaker, I would like to
make a statement on the Government’s work to secure a Withdrawal
Agreement that can command the support of this
House.
A fortnight ago I committed to come back
before the House today if the Government had not by now secured a
majority for a Withdrawal Agreement and a Political
Declaration.
In the two weeks since, my Rt Hon Friends
the Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, the
Attorney General and I have been engaging in focused discussions
with the EU to find a way forward that will work for both sides.
We are making good progress in that work.
I had a constructive meeting with President
Juncker in Brussels last week, to take stock of the work done by
our respective teams.
We discussed the legal changes that are
required to guarantee that the Northern Ireland backstop cannot
endure indefinitely.
On the Political Declaration, we discussed
what additions or changes can be made to increase confidence in
the focus and ambition of both sides in delivering the future
partnership we envisage as soon as possible – and the Secretary
of State is following this up with Michel Barnier.
I also had a number of positive meetings at
the EU-League of Arab States Summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, including
with President Donald Tusk.
I have now spoken to the leaders of every
single EU member state to explain the UK’s
position.
And the UK and EU teams are continuing their
work and we agreed to review progress again in the coming
days.
As part of these discussions, the UK and EU
have agreed to consider a joint work stream to develop
alternative arrangements to ensure the absence of a hard border
in Northern Ireland.
This work will be done in parallel with the
future relationship negotiations and is without prejudice to
them.
Our aim is to ensure that, even if the full
future relationship is not in place by the end of the
implementation period, the backstop is not needed because we have
a set of alternative arrangements ready to go.
I want to thank my Hon and Rt Hon friends
for their contribution to this work and reaffirm that we are
seized of the need to progress that work as quickly as
possible.
President Juncker has already agreed that
the EU will give priority to this work. And the Government
expects that this will be an important strand of the next
phase.
The Secretary of State for Exiting the EU
will be having further discussions with Michel Barnier and we will announce
details ahead of the Meaningful Vote.
We will also be setting up domestic
structures to support this work, including ensuring we can take
advice from external experts involved in customs processes around
the world, from businesses who trade with the EU and beyond –
and, of course, from colleagues across the
House.
This will all be supported by civil service
resource as well as funding for the Government to help develop,
test and pilot proposals which can form part of these alternative
arrangements.
Mr Speaker, I know what this House needs in
order to support a Withdrawal Agreement.
The EU knows what is
needed.
And I am working hard to deliver
it.
As well as changes to the backstop, we are
also working across a number of other areas to build support for
the Withdrawal Agreement and to give the House confidence in the
future relationship that the UK and EU will go on to
negotiate.
This includes ensuring that leaving the EU
will not lead to any lowering of standards in relation to
workers’ rights, environmental protections or health and
safety.
Taking back control cannot mean giving up
our control of these standards, especially when UK governments of
all parties have proudly pursued policies that exceed the
minimums set by the EU - from Labour giving British workers more
annual leave to the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats giving
all employees the right to request flexible
working.
Not only would giving up control go against
the spirit of the referendum result, it would also mean accepting
new EU laws automatically, even if they were to reduce workers’
rights or change them in a way that was not right for
us.
Instead, and in the interests of building
support across the House, we are prepared to commit to giving
Parliament a vote on whether it wishes to follow suit whenever
the EU standards in areas such as workers’ rights and health and
safety are judged to have been strengthened.
The Government will consult with businesses
and trade Unions as it looks at new EU legislation and decides
how the UK should respond.
We will legislate to give our commitments on
both non-regression and future developments force in UK
law.
And following further cross-party talks, we
will shortly be bringing forward detailed proposals to ensure
that as we leave the EU, we not only protect workers’ rights, but
continue to enhance them.
Mr Speaker, as the government committed to
the House last week, we are today publishing the paper assessing
our readiness for No Deal.
I believe that if we have to, we will
ultimately make a success of a No Deal.
But this paper provides an honest assessment
of the very serious challenges it would bring in the short-term –
and further reinforces why the best way for this House to honour
the referendum result is to leave with a deal.
As I committed to the House, the Government
will today table an amendable motion for debate
tomorrow.
But I know Members across the House are
genuinely worried that time is running out, that if the
Government doesn’t come back with a further meaningful vote or it
loses that vote, Parliament won’t have time to make its voice
heard on the next steps. I know too that members across the House
are deeply concerned by the effect of the current uncertainty on
businesses.
So today I want to reassure the House by
making three further commitments.
First, we will hold a second
Meaningful Vote by Tuesday 12 March at the latest.
Second, if the Government has not won
a Meaningful Vote by Tuesday 12 March then it will – in addition
to its obligations to table a neutral, amendable motion under
section 13 of the EU Withdrawal Act – table a motion to be voted
on by Wednesday 13 March at the latest, asking this House if it
supports leaving the EU without a Withdrawal Agreement and a
framework for a future relationship on 29
March.
So the United Kingdom will only leave
without a deal on 29 March if there is explicit consent in this
House for that outcome.
Third, if the House, having rejected
leaving with the deal negotiated with the EU, then rejects
leaving on 29 March without a withdrawal agreement and future
framework, the Government will, on 14 March, bring forward a
motion on whether Parliament wants to seek a short limited
extension to Article 50 – and if the House votes for an
extension, seek to agree that extension approved by the House
with the EU, and bring forward the necessary legislation to
change the exit date commensurate with that
extension.
These commitments all fit the timescale set
out in the Private Members Bill in the name of the Rt Hon Member
for Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford.
They are commitments I am making as Prime
Minister and I will stick by them, as I have previous commitments
to make statements and table amendable motions by specific
dates.
Let me be clear, I do not want to see
Article 50 extended. Our absolute focus should be on
working to get a deal and leaving on 29 March.
An extension beyond the end of June would
mean the UK taking part in the European Parliament
elections. What kind of message would that send to the more
than 17 million people who voted to leave the EU nearly three
years ago now? And the House should be clear that a short
extension – not beyond the end of June – would almost certainly
have to be a one-off. If we had not taken part in the
European Parliament elections, it would be extremely difficult to
extend again, so it would create a much sharper cliff edge in a
few months’ time.
An extension cannot take no deal off the
table. The only way to do that is to revoke Article 50, which I
shall not do, or agree a deal.
Now, I have been clear throughout this
process that my aim is to bring the country back
together.
This House can only do that by implementing
the decision of the British people.
The Government is determined to do so in a
way that commands the support of this House.
But just as government requires the support
of this House in delivering the vote of the British people, so
the House should respect the proper functions of the
Government.
Tying the Government’s hands by seeking to
commandeer the order paper would have far-reaching implications
for the way in which the United Kingdom is governed and the
balance of powers and responsibilities in our democratic
institutions.
And it would offer no solution to the
challenge of finding a deal which this House can
support.
Neither would seeking an extension to
Article 50 now make getting a deal any
easier.
Ultimately the choices we face would remain
unchanged – leave with a deal, leave with no deal, or have no
Brexit.
So when it comes to that motion tomorrow,
the House needs to come together, as we did on 29 January, and
send a clear message that there is a stable majority in favour of
leaving the EU with a deal.
A number of Hon and Rt Hon Members have
understandably raised the rights of EU citizens living in the
UK.
As I set out last September, following the
Salzburg Summit – even in the event of no deal, the rights of the
three million EU citizens living in the UK will be
protected.
That is our guarantee to
them.
They are our friends, our neighbours, our
colleagues. We want them to stay.
But a separate agreement for citizens’
rights is something the EU have been clear they do not have the
legal authority for.
If it is not done in a Withdrawal Agreement,
these issues become a matter member states unless the EU were to
agree a new mandate to take this forward.
At the very start of this process the UK
sought to separate out this issue, but that was something which
the EU has been consistent on.
However, my Right Hon Friend the Foreign
Secretary has written to all of his counterparts and we are
holding further urgent discussions with member states to seek
assurances on the rights of UK citizens.
I urge all EU countries to make this
guarantee and end the uncertainty for these
citizens.
I hope that the government’s efforts can
give the House – and EU Citizens here in the UK – the
reassurances they need and deserve.
Mr Speaker, for some Hon and Rt Hon Members,
taking the United Kingdom out of the European Union is the
culmination of a long and sincerely fought
campaign.
For others, leaving the EU goes against much
that they have stood for and fought for with equal sincerity for
just as long.
But Parliament gave the choice to the
people.
In doing so we told them we would honour
their decision.
Mr Speaker, that remains the resolve of this
side of the House.
But last night we learned that it is no
longer the commitment of the leader of the
opposition.
He has gone back on his promise to respect
the referendum result and now wants to hold a divisive second
referendum that would take our country right back to square
one.
Anyone who voted Labour at the last election
because they thought he would deliver Brexit will rightly be
appalled.
This House voted to trigger Article 50, and
this House has a responsibility to deliver on the
result.
The very credibility of our democracy is at
stake.
By leaving the EU with a deal, we can move
our country forward.
Even with the uncertainty we face today, we
have more people in work than ever before, wages growing at their
fastest rate for a decade and debt falling as a share of the
economy.
If we can leave with a deal, end the
uncertainty and move on beyond Brexit, we can do so much more to
deliver real economic progress to every part of
country.
So I hope tomorrow this House can show
that…
…with legally binding changes on the
backstop…
…commitments to protect workers’ rights and
the environment…
…an enhanced role for Parliament in the next
phase of negotiations…
…and a determination to address the wider
concerns of those who voted to leave…
…we will have a deal that this House can
support.
And in doing so, that we send a clear
message: That this House is resolved to honour the result of the
referendum and leave the European Union with a
deal.
And I commend this statement to the
House.
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