Jeremy Corbyn response to Theresa May's Brexit statement
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Jeremy Corbyn MP, Leader of the Labour Party, responding to Theresa
May's Brexit statement in the House, said: I thank the Prime
Minister for advance copy of this statement. In fact, I
received it yesterday when the Prime Minister made an appeal titled
“Seeking Common Ground in Parliament”. And where did she make this
appeal? Not in Parliament but in a small room just down the road.
Mr Speaker, it is now clear the bold new deal the Prime...Request free trial
Jeremy Corbyn MP, Leader of the Labour Party, responding to Theresa May's Brexit statement in the House, said:
I thank the Prime Minister for advance copy of this statement.
In fact, I received it yesterday when the Prime Minister made an appeal titled “Seeking Common Ground in Parliament”. And where did she make this appeal? Not in Parliament but in a small room just down the road.
I thank the Prime Minister for her letter. It offers no change on a customs union, no change on Single Market alignment and no dynamic alignment on environmental protections.
This Government is too weak and too divided to get this country out of the mess they have created.
For over two years the Prime Minister bullishly refused to
consult the public or Parliament. She did not seek a compromise
until after she had missed her own deadline to leave. And by the
time she finally did she had lost the authority to deliver.
The multiple leaks reported from Cabinet yesterday show the Prime Minister couldn’t even get the compromise deal she wanted through her own Cabinet.
And it is clear that the shrunken offer that emerged satisfied no one, not her own backbenchers, not the DUP and, Mr Speaker, not the Official Opposition either.
No Labour MP can vote for a deal on the promise of a Prime Minister who only has days left in her job.
Even if the Prime Minister could honour her promises, the deal
she is putting before us doesn't represent a genuine
compromise.
Firstly, the Prime Minister pretends she is delivering something new with a temporary customs union.
It’s simply not compatible.
And Mr Speaker, the Government has failed to provide any economic
analysis to show this would make us better off.
Labour set out a sensible compromise plan over a year ago,
including a comprehensive and permanent customs union with the EU
that gives us a say. That would allow us to strike trade deals as
part of the world’s biggest trading bloc bringing investment
while maintaining the highest standards. It is credible and achievable and the best way to protect industry, manufacturing and jobs something this Government is woefully indifferent to as the latest steel crisis shows.
The Government must be prepared to step in and take a public
stake to save thousands of high skilled jobs at British Steel a
foundation industry for any major economy.
But many in the Trade union movement remain deeply sceptical. As
Francis O'Grady of the TUC said yesterday and I quote: "This
reheated Brexit deal won't protect people's jobs and
rights".
It means vital issues are being neglected by Government the
crisis in our schools and hospitals the housing crisis and the
cruelty of their social security policy. |
