MP, Leader of the , has today (Thursday 17
January 2019) written to the Prime Minister demanding that “the
starting point for any talks about how to break the Brexit
deadlock must be that the threat of a disastrous ‘no deal’
outcome is ruled out.” He writes to the Prime Minister: “if you
are serious about reaching a deal, then ‘no deal’ must be ruled
out.”
In the letter, states that “after the
unprecedented and unnecessary delay to the meaningful vote last
month, entering into talks while the clock continues to run down,
and the threat of a chaotic ‘no deal’ increases, would be a
reckless leap in the dark.”
also expresses disappointment
that the Prime Minister has continued to rule out a customs
union, writing that “a new customs union is part of a solution
favoured by most businesses and trade unions, and one that I
believe could command a majority of the House of Commons.”
Ends
Notes to Editors
Full text of the letter
Dear Prime Minister,
I am writing to follow up on my statement in the Commons last
night on a point of order.
I wish to reiterate the points I raised at Prime Minister’s
Questions and to formally set out the position of the .
We are firmly of the opinion that the starting point for any
talks about how to break the Brexit deadlock must be that the
threat of a disastrous ‘no deal’ outcome is ruled out.
That is the position that Labour set out in our 2017 manifesto,
at our 2018 party conference – and that we have consistently
adhered to throughout.
I note that it is a position shared by all the opposition
parties, including the DUP, and is the expressed will of
Parliament. If you are serious about reaching a deal, then ‘no
deal’ must be ruled out.
After the unprecedented and unnecessary delay to the meaningful
vote last month, entering into talks while the clock continues to
run down, and the threat of a chaotic ‘no deal’ increases, would
be a reckless leap in the dark.
The Chancellor and the Business Secretary were both open to
ruling out ‘no deal’ in the recent conference call with business
leaders.
Therefore, on behalf of the , I ask you to rule out ‘no
deal’ and to immediately end the waste of hundreds of millions of
pounds of public money preparing for a ‘no deal’ outcome. The
£4.2 billion currently allocated to ‘no deal’ planning could
significantly improve many of cash-starved public services on
which people rely and could transform the lives of those
struggling on Universal Credit.
Labour is open to meaningful discussions. But following the
decisive rejection of the government’s deal by MPs on Tuesday,
those cannot be on the basis of your existing red lines. It is
clear that no tweaks or further assurances are going to win
support for the government’s Brexit deal in Parliament.
We have set out an alternative framework for a better deal: based
upon a new comprehensive UK-EU customs union; a strong Single
Market deal; and guarantees that there can be no race to the
bottom on rights and standards. That is the consistent position
that Labour has outlined over the past year.
I am disappointed that there have already been several briefings
in which you continue to rule out a customs union. A new customs
union is part of a solution favoured by most businesses and trade
unions, and one that I believe could command a majority of the
House of Commons.
I look forward to receiving your reply.
Yours sincerely,
MP
Leader of the Opposition