Category: Brexit

  • Boris Johnson – 2020 Statement on the Future Relationship with the EU Bill

    Boris Johnson – 2020 Statement on the Future Relationship with the EU Bill

    The statement made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 30 December 2020.

    I beg to move, That the Bill be now read a Second time.

    May I begin by thanking you, Mr Speaker, and the House authorities and all your staff for their hard work in allowing us to meet today? I also welcome the outstanding news that AstraZeneca is now rolling out a new UK-made vaccine, approved by the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, that offers hope to millions in this country and around the world.

    Having taken back control of our money, our borders, our laws and our waters by leaving the European Union on 31 January, we now seize this moment to forge a fantastic new relationship with our European neighbours based on free trade and friendly co-operation.

    Ian Blackford (Ross, Skye and Lochaber) (SNP)

    Will the Prime Minister give way?

    The Prime Minister

    In a minute. At the heart of this Bill is one of the biggest free trade agreements in the world: a comprehensive—

    Ian Blackford

    On a point of order, Mr Speaker. I seek your clarification. I am just wondering how on earth the Prime Minister can talk about taking back control of waters when Scottish fishermen are going to have less access and less fish to catch as a consequence of his con deal.

    Mr Speaker

    May I just say, first of all, that that is not a point of order? We are very limited on time. Can we please try to keep to a tight agenda to allow everybody the time to contribute?

    The Prime Minister

    Although that was not a valid point of order, I must none the less correct the right hon. Gentleman. In fact, under this deal we have taken back control of our borders. Indeed, Scottish fishermen from the get-go will have access to bigger quotas of all the relevant stocks. From the end of the transition period, as he knows full well—

    Ian Blackford rose—

    Mr Speaker

    Order. I understand that this is an important day and it is important that we all get on the record. It is also important that I get to the leader of the SNP. What I would not like to do is run out of time because of the number of times he stands for interventions. If the Prime Minister gives way, he will give way straight away, but please let us try to get the debate under way. At least give yourself time to hear what the Prime Minister has to say before you disagree.

    The Prime Minister

    With great respect to the right hon. Gentleman, I feel I must correct him. Not only will we take back control of our waters, we will increase Scottish fishermen’s share of all the relevant stocks: cod, for instance, going up by 47% to 57%; North sea haddock going up by 70% to 84%. That is just next year, Mr Speaker. In five and a half years’ time, we take control of the entire spectacular marine wealth of Scotland. It is only the Scottish nationalist party that would, with spectacular hypocrisy, hand back control of the waters of this country to the UK.

    Ian Blackford

    On a point of order, Mr Speaker. Could you point out to the Prime Minister that the name of my party is the Scottish National party?

    Mr Speaker

    In fairness, I have pointed that out in the past. It is the Scottish National party.

    The Prime Minister

    Mr Speaker, I wish the right hon. Gentleman to know that I am using the word “nationalist” with a small “n”. I do not think he would disagree with that, which is semantically justifiable under the circumstances. Yet in spite of that nomenclature, they would hand back control of Scotland’s waters and go back into the common fisheries policy. What the Bill does is take back control—

    Ian Blackford

    Will the Prime Minister give way?

    The Prime Minister

    Absolutely not.

    What the Bill does is take back control of the spectacular marine wealth of Scotland and the rest of the UK.

    Anthony Mangnall (Totnes) (Con)

    Will my right hon. Friend give way?

    The Prime Minister

    In a moment.

    At the heart of the Bill is, as we have discussed in this Chamber many times, Mr Speaker, one of the biggest free trade agreements in the world: a comprehensive Canada-style deal worth over £660 billion, which, if anything, should allow companies to do even more business with our European friends, safeguarding millions of jobs and livelihoods in our UK and across the continent. In less than 48 hours we will leave the EU single market and the customs union as we promised. British exporters will not face a sudden thicket of trade barriers, but rather, for the first time in the history of EU agreements, zero tariffs and zero quotas. Just as we have avoided trade barriers—

    Several hon. Members rose—

    The Prime Minister

    Mr Speaker, I think that plenty of Members want to speak. I have already taken plenty of interventions and points of order. I am going to make some progress.

    Just as we have avoided trade barriers, so we have also ensured the UK’s full control of our laws and our regulations. There is a vital symmetry between those two achievements. The central purpose of the Bill is to accomplish something that the British people always knew in their hearts could be done, yet which we were continually told was impossible. We were told that we could not have our cake and eat it—do you remember how often we were told that, Mr Speaker?—namely, that we could trade and co-operate as we will with our European neighbours on the closest terms of friendship and good will, while retaining sovereign control of our laws and our national destiny. That unifying thread runs through every clause of the Bill, which embodies our vision, shared with our European neighbours, of a new relationship between Britain and the EU as sovereign equals, joined by friendship, commerce, history, interests and values, while respecting one another’s freedom of action and recognising that we have nothing to fear if we sometimes choose to do things differently.

    Jim Shannon (Strangford) (DUP)

    The devil is in the detail in anything that is before us today. Can the Prime Minister confirm—I hope that this is the case—that we see the end of discrimination and that the Hague preference is away, in the bin? The Killybegs Fishermen’s Organisation is expressing dismay from the Republic of Ireland. Will UK quotas be shared with Northern Ireland? Will there be tariffs for our ports of Portavogie, Ardglass and Kilkeel landing the fish that they catch in Northern Ireland, and will the £100 million for fishing organisations be shared equally across the whole United Kingdom? Those are real, practical issues for us in Northern Ireland.

    The Prime Minister

    I can assure the hon. Gentleman that the entire UK will share in the programme of investment in our fishing industry. To get ourselves ready across the whole UK for the colossal uplift in fish that we will obtain, and even before the end of the transition period, the hon. Gentleman should know that we will fish about 130,000 tonnes more fish in the UK a year than we do at present. Currently, that is an opportunity that we must work to seize. [Interruption.] No.

    We have much to gain from the healthy stimulus of competition, and the Bill therefore demonstrates how Britain can be at once European and sovereign. You will agree, Mr Speaker, that our negotiators published their feat at astonishing speed. It took nearly eight years for the Uruguay round of world trade talks to produce a deal; five years for the EU to reach a trade agreement with Canada; and six for Japan. We have done this in less than a year, in the teeth of a pandemic, and we have pressed ahead with this task, resisting all the calls for delay, precisely because creating certainty about our future provides the best chance of beating covid and bouncing back even more strongly next year. That was our objective.

    I hope that the House joins me in commending my noble Friend Lord Frost and every member of his team for their skill, mastery and perseverance in translating our vision into a practical agreement. Let me also pay tribute to President Ursula von der Leyen, Michel Barnier and all our European friends for their pragmatism and foresight, and their understanding that it is profoundly in the interests of the EU to live alongside a prosperous, contented and sovereign United Kingdom. The House understands the significance of the fact that this agreement is not EU law, but international law, so there is no direct effect—EU law will no longer have any special status in the UK.

    Ian Blackford

    Will the Prime Minister give way?

    The Prime Minister

    I have already given way quite a few times to the right hon. Gentleman.

    There is no jurisdiction for the European Court of Justice.

    Ian Blackford

    On a point of order, Mr Speaker. I feel that I have to point out to the House the historic principle in Scotland, as established by law, is that it is the people of Scotland who are sovereign, and it is the people of Scotland who will determine to take them back into the European Union with independence.

    Mr Speaker

    As the leader of the SNP knows, that is not a point of order. I am desperate to hear what he has to say in his contribution. Rather than use it up now, why does he not save it so that others can get in? Prime Minister.

    The Prime Minister

    I am grateful, Mr Speaker. Of course, it was the people of Scotland who took the sovereign decision, quite rightly, to remain in the UK—a once-in-a-generation decision. I think it highly unlikely that the people of Scotland will take a decision to cast away their new-found freedoms and new-found opportunities, not least over the marine wealth of Scotland.

    We will be able to design our own standards and regulations, and the laws that the House of Commons passes will be interpreted—I know that this is a keen interest of hon. and right hon. Members—solely by British judges sitting in British courts. We will have the opportunity to devise new ways to spur and encourage flourishing sectors in which this country leads the world, from green energy and life sciences to synthetic biology.

    Greg Clark (Tunbridge Wells) (Con)

    Some of us had different views on Brexit, but those debates are now for the history books. Everyone in the House and the country should recognise the benefits of an agreement that goes beyond free trade, from science to energy to security. However, will the Prime Minister capitalise on the excellent news that we have had today on the vaccine by pursuing an industrial strategy that puts science and technology at its heart, so that we can grasp the opportunities that come as the world bounces back from covid during the year ahead?

    Mr Speaker

    Can I just help people and say that those who are high up on the speaking list will understandably get put down if they make continuous interventions? I want to get as many people in as possible, so please—

    Sir Bernard Jenkin (Harwich and North Essex) (Con)

    Including the Prime Minister.

    Mr Speaker

    Thank you, Sir Bernard. Prime Minister.

    The Prime Minister

    I am grateful to my right hon. Friend the Member for Tunbridge Wells (Greg Clark). I remember well working with him on his industrial strategy and his ideas for championing green technology and biosciences, and I can tell him that those ideas remain at the heart of this Government’s agenda. We will certainly be using our new-found legislative freedom to drive progress in those sciences and those investments across the whole UK. We will be free of EU state aid rules; we will be able to decide where and how we level up across our country, with new jobs and new hope, including free ports and new green industrial zones of a kind I am sure my right hon. Friend would approve of.

    I must make an important point. If, in using our new freedoms, either Britain or the EU believes it is somehow being unfairly undercut, then, subject to independent third-party arbitration, and provided the measures are proportionate, either of us can decide, as sovereign equals, to protect our consumers, but this treaty explicitly envisages that any such action should be infrequent.

    Mr Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi (Slough) (Lab) rose—

    The Prime Minister

    However, the treaty banishes the old concepts of uniformity and harmonisation, in favour of the right to make our own regulatory choices and deal with the consequences. Every modern free trade agreement includes reciprocal commitments designed to prevent distortions of trade. The true significance of the agreement embodied in the Bill is that there is no role for the European Court of Justice, no ratchet clause on labour or environmental standards, and no dynamic alignment with the EU state aid regime or, indeed, any other aspect of EU law. In every respect, we have recovered our freedom of action.

    Mr Dhesi rose—

    The Prime Minister

    I give way with pleasure to the hon. Gentleman, who has been up and down many times.

    Mr Dhesi

    Many hon. Members will face a dire dilemma because they will feel that our country has been sold short. On the one hand, we have the Prime Minister’s thin, terrible, burnt oven-ready deal. On the other hand, we face the prospect of an even more damaging and destructive no-deal Brexit. Can the Prime Minister advise us why, given that services account for almost 80% of our economy, there is so little for that sector in this deal? In particular, why could he not negotiate equivalence and passporting rights for the all-important financial services sector?

    The Prime Minister

    It was not quite clear from that intervention which way the Labour party is going to go on this—whether the hon. Gentleman is going to go with the leader of the Labour party and vote for the deal, or whether he is going to join other members of the Labour party and continue to dither and delay. We on the Government Benches are going to get on; we will be free of the strictures of the common agricultural policy, and we will be able to conserve our landscapes and support our farmers exactly as we choose.

    On Friday—I am coming to a point that has been raised several times, but I will repeat it because it is a wonderful point—for the first time in 50 years, the UK will once again be recognised as an independent coastal state, regaining control of our waters and righting the wrong that was done by the common fisheries policy throughout our EU membership. Of course I have always recognised—

    Several hon. Members rose—

    The Prime Minister

    I have answered the point from Opposition Members quite a lot. I will give way to my hon. Friend the Member for Totnes (Anthony Mangnall).

    Anthony Mangnall

    The Prime Minister will know that Brixham, the most valuable fishing port in England, wants to see our waters regained, with access and control, and a rebuilding of the fishing industry in the UK. This deal delivers that. Can he assure my fishermen and fishermen around the country that that is what this Government are delivering on?

    The Prime Minister

    That is absolutely right, and the voice of Brixham should be heard up and down the country because that point is entirely correct and might be registered with advantage by the right hon. Member for Ross, Skye and Lochaber (Ian Blackford).

    I have always recognised that this was going to be a difficult period for our European friends and partners, because they have been fishing in these waters for decades, if not centuries. At first, as the House will know, they sought an adjustment period of 14 years, but our negotiators whittled that down to five and a half years, during which the UK’s share—[Interruption.] In that five and a half years, the UK’s share of our fish in our waters will rise from over half today, to around two-thirds. Of course we would like to have done that more quickly, but it is also true that once the adjustment period comes to an end there will be no limit, other than limits that are placed by the needs of science and conservation, on our ability to make use of our marine wealth.

    Fifteen per cent. of the EU’s historic catch from our waters will be returned to this country next year alone. To prepare our fishing communities for that moment, we will invest £100 million in a programme to modernise their fleets and the fish processing industry—[Interruption.] The hon. Member for Glasgow East (David Linden) should listen to this, because we will be restoring a great British industry to the eminence that it deserves, levelling up communities across the UK, particularly and including Scotland where, in my view, those interests have been neglected for too long.

    I find it extraordinary that on the eve of this great opportunity, the declared position of the Scottish National national/nationalist party—with a small “n”—is to hand control of the very waters we have just reclaimed straight back to the EU. That is its policy. It plans to ensnare Scotland’s fishing fleet in the dragnets of the common fisheries policy all over again. In the meantime, guess what SNP Members will do today, Mr Speaker. They are going to vote today for a no-deal Brexit! [Interruption.] Perhaps the hon. Member for Glasgow East will tell me that he is going to vote for the deal.

    David Linden (Glasgow East) (SNP)

    I am immensely grateful to the Prime Minister for briefly pausing that monologue that was designed for the European Research Group. On fish, he is waxing lyrical about how amazing this deal is, but I would like to read him a quote from Andrew Locker, chair of the National Federation of Fishermen’s Organisations, who says:

    “I am angry, disappointed and betrayed. Boris Johnson promised us the rights to all the fish that swim in our exclusive economic zone and we have got a fraction of that.”

    Is he wrong?

    The Prime Minister

    I am afraid that yes, he is. We will take back control not only by becoming an independent coastal state from 1 January, but in five and a half years’ time, we will be able to fish every single fish in our waters, if we so choose. That is the reality. In the meantime, as I say, and the hon. Gentleman did not deny it—I don’t think I heard him deny it—the Scottish National party is going to vote against the deal. It is effectively going to vote for no deal, which it campaigned against and denounced, proving once and for all, that the interests of Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland are best served by a one-nation party serving one United Kingdom.

    This deal was negotiated—the hon. Gentleman should know this—by a big team from every part of our United Kingdom, and it serves the whole of the UK, not least by protecting the integrity of the United Kingdom single internal market, and Northern Ireland’s place within it. Our points-based immigration system will end free movement and give us full control over who enters the country. By the way, on that point I want to thank my right hon. Friend the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster for all he did to protect the interests of Northern Ireland.

    At the same time, the deal provides certainty for airlines and hauliers who have suffered grievously during this pandemic. It guarantees the freedom of British citizens to travel to and from the EU and retain access to healthcare. It provides certainty for our police, our border forces, and our security agencies to work alongside our European friends to keep our people safe, and the SNP are going to vote against that, Mr Speaker. The deal provides certainty for our partnerships on scientific research, because we want our country to be a science superpower, but also a collaborative science superpower. It provides certainty for business, from financial services to our world-leading manufacturers, including our car industry, safeguarding highly skilled jobs and investment across our country.

    As for the Leader of the Opposition, I am delighted that he has found yet another position on Brexit, and, having plunged down every blind alley and exhausted every possible alternative, he has come to the right conclusion—namely, to vote for this agreement, which this Government have secured.

    Peter Kyle (Hove) (Lab) rose—

    The Prime Minister

    I hope very much that the hon. Gentleman is going to tell us that he, too, is going to join his right hon. and learned Friend the Member for Holborn and St Pancras (Keir Starmer) and vote for this agreement. Is that the case?

    Peter Kyle

    I am very happy to confirm for the Prime Minister that I will be voting for this agreement. He mentioned several times his levelling-up agenda, but financial services and those working in the sector have been left entirely out of it, so does he not agree that every city and every town that is dependent on financial services, from Leeds to Manchester to Edinburgh, and many in between, have been levelled down and left out of this deal?

    The Prime Minister

    It is great to hear a member of the Labour party not only backing the bankers and backing financial services—a fantastic development—but also backing this deal. The hon. Gentleman is quite right because, actually, this deal does a great deal for services, for financial services, for the legal profession and many other professions. But, alas, the good news about the Labour party stops there, because I am told that the right hon. and learned Gentleman intends to ask the British people for a mandate to rewrite the deal in 2024—that is what he wants to do. I think, frankly, we got Brexit done; let’s keep Brexit done. And let’s press ahead with this Government’s mission to unite and level up across our whole country and grasp the opportunities before us, because I have always said—

    Several hon. Members rose—

    The Prime Minister

    I am going to make some progress because many Members want to speak. I have always said that Brexit is not an end but a beginning, and the responsibility now rests with all of us to make the best use of the powers that we have regained and the tools that we have taken back into our hands. We are going to begin by fulfilling our manifesto promise to maintain the highest standards of labour and environmental regulation, because no caricature can be more inaccurate than the idea of some bargain-basement Dickensian Britain, as if enlightened EU regulation has been our only salvation from Dickensian squalor. Our national standards have always been among the very best in the world, and this House can be trusted to use its new freedom to keep them that way without any outside invigilation.

    We are going to open a new chapter in our national story, striking free trade deals around the world, adding to the agreements with 63 countries we have already achieved and reasserting global Britain as a liberal, outward-looking force for good. Detaching ourselves from the EU is only a prelude to the greater task of establishing our new role, and this country is contributing more than any other to vaccinate people across the world against covid, leading the way in preventing future pandemics. We will continue to campaign for 12 years of quality education for every girl in the world, and I thank my right hon. Friend the Foreign Secretary for what he is doing on that. We will continue to lead the drive towards global net zero as we host COP26 in Glasgow next year.

    I hope and believe—and I think, actually, the tone this morning has given me encouragement in this belief; the mood in the House this morning seems on the whole to be positive—[Interruption.] In spite of the as-usual synthetic and confected indignation that we hear from some on the Benches opposite, I hope and believe that this agreement will also serve to end some of the rancour and recrimination that we have had in recent years and allow us to come together as a country to leave old arguments—old, desiccated, tired, super-masticated arguments—behind, move on and build a new and great future for our country, because those of us who campaigned for Britain to leave the EU never sought a rupture with our closest neighbours. We never wanted to sever ourselves from our fellow democracies, beneath whose soil lie British war graves in tranquil cemeteries, often tended by local schoolchildren, testament to our shared struggle for freedom and everything we cherish in common. What we wanted was not a rupture but a resolution—a resolution of the old, tired, vexed question of Britain’s political relations with Europe, which has bedevilled our post-war history. First we stood aloof, then we became a half-hearted, sometimes obstructive member of the EU. Now, with this Bill, we are going to become a friendly neighbour—the best friend and ally the EU could have, working hand in glove whenever our values and interests coincide, while fulfilling the sovereign wish of the British people to live under their own laws, made by their own elected Parliament. That is the historic resolution delivered by this Bill. I commend it to the House.

  • Valerie Vaz – 2020 Comments on the Motion Timing for the EU Trade Agreement

    Valerie Vaz – 2020 Comments on the Motion Timing for the EU Trade Agreement

    The comments made by Valerie Vaz, the Labour MP for Walsall South, on 30 December 2020.

    Clearly the Opposition are desperately disappointed that there was not enough time to debate this deal properly. This is unacceptable. It puts a great deal of pressure on House staff and everybody else, but I am pleased that the virtual Parliament will enable our colleagues to take part in it.

    The Opposition have facilitated this. We facilitated the time because we want to say that this is not our deal, but we will vote for legislation that will enact it to prevent no deal. That is the key point about why we are here today: we want to prevent no deal, which would have a great effect on our economy and our constituents. We support the motion to enable this legislation to come forward because we are up against a deadline of 31 December. After that, there would be no deal, and we must stop it, so the Opposition agree with the programme motion.

  • Rachel Reeves – 2020 Comments on Michael Gove’s “Bumpy Moments” Interview

    Rachel Reeves – 2020 Comments on Michael Gove’s “Bumpy Moments” Interview

    The comments made by Rachel Reeves, the Shadow Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, on 28 December 2020.

    The Government is treating its own incompetence as inevitable.

    There is no reason why the deal the Government ended up with had to be run so close to the wire, nor why this period must be bumpy had the Government prepared properly.

    But instead they refused to engage with business on preparations and dodged repeated questions from Labour for months on how many customs agents were recruited and ready, and what IT systems are properly in place.

    They should behave like grown-ups and take responsibility for governance.

  • Ursula von der Leyen – 2020 Comments on UK/EU Trade Deal

    Ursula von der Leyen – 2020 Comments on UK/EU Trade Deal

    The comments made by Ursula von der Leyen, the President of the European Commission, on 24 December 2020.

    The UK remains a trusted partner. We will stand shoulder to shoulder to deliver on our common global goals.

    But now let’s turn the page and look to the future.

    To all Europeans I say: it is time to leave Brexit behind.

    Our future is made in Europe.

  • Alister Jack – 2020 Comments on UK/EU Trade Deal

    Alister Jack – 2020 Comments on UK/EU Trade Deal

    The comments made by Alister Jack, the Secretary of State for Scotland, on 28 December 2020.

    We have secured a historic Free Trade deal with the EU that delivers for Scotland and the whole of the UK. This is a deep and wide-ranging deal, covering trade, security, travel, transport, energy, health and social security.

    As Parliament prepares to vote on the deal this week, I urge all Scottish MPs to give it their wholehearted support.

    Outside the EU, the UK can sign our own trade deals around the world, bringing new opportunities for exporters and some of Scotland’s most iconic products.

    For our farmers, the deal avoids tariffs on their world-beating Scotch lamb and beef.

    For our fishermen and coastal communities, the deal delivers what we promised.

    We are regaining control of our waters, we are restoring our status as an independent coastal state and, even during the five year adjustment period, there will be a big overall increase in our share of the catch in our waters.

    As we leave the Common Fisheries Policy, our fishermen will also enjoy near-exclusive access to inshore waters up to the historic 12 mile limit.

    The deal is good news for Scotland and I believe it is now time to move on from the Brexit debate and join forces in embracing our exciting future. Whether Leaver or Remainer in 2016 we need to come to together to make the most of our new opportunities.

    The people of Scotland will expect their MPs to do the right thing on Wednesday and vote for the deal. They will not easily forgive those who reject this Free Trade Agreement or throw their weight behind a no deal Brexit.

  • Michel Barnier – 2020 Comments on UK/EU Trade Deal

    Michel Barnier – 2020 Comments on UK/EU Trade Deal

    The comments made by Michel Barnier, the European Commission’s Chief Negotiator on Brexit, on 24 December 2020.

    The clock is no longer ticking.

    After 4.5 years of collective effort and #EU unity:

    To preserve peace on the island of Ireland. To protect citizens and the Single Market. To build a new partnership with the UK.

    Thank you all.

  • Neil Coyle – 2020 Comments on UK/EU Trade Deal

    Neil Coyle – 2020 Comments on UK/EU Trade Deal

    The comments made by Neil Coyle, the Labour MP for Bermondsey and Old Southwark, on 24 December 2020.

    Once again I find myself out of sync with the Labour whip and direction from shadow cabinet. I had hoped this would change in 2020. I have until 30th (my birthday!) to decide what to do. Happy Christmas!

  • Keir Starmer – 2020 Statement on UK/EU Trade Deal

    Keir Starmer – 2020 Statement on UK/EU Trade Deal

    The statement made by Keir Starmer, the Leader of the Opposition, on 24 December 2020.

    As leader of the Labour Party, I have urged the Government to get on with negotiating the Brexit deal that it promised.

    I wanted the talks to succeed.

    I did so because a deal is in the national interest.

    Businesses need a deal.

    Working people need a deal.

    Families need a deal.

    The fact that the Government was even considering no deal – during a global pandemic – was grossly irresponsible.

    After months of negotiations, a deal has now been agreed.

    The choice facing Parliament – the choice facing Labour – is now whether to accept that deal or reject it.

    The deal is a thin agreement.

    It does not provide adequate protections for British manufacturing.

    Our financial services.

    Creative industries.

    Or workplace rights.

    It is not the deal the government promised.

    Far from it.

    And there are serious questions about the Government’s preparedness for the new arrangements.

    Leaving everything to the last minute has made it even more difficult for businesses to be ready.

    A better deal could have been negotiated.

    But I accept that option has now gone.

    The chance for renegotiation is over.

    There are just two paths now left for our country.

    To move forward with a deal.

    Or without one.

    No deal is simply not an option.

    The social, economic and political consequences would be devastating.

    Jobs would be put at risk.

    Businesses would collapse.

    Investment would dry up.

    Our national security would be threatened.

    The disruption we have seen at the Port of Dover in recent days would be the tip of the iceberg.

    And the cumulative effect – on top of the worst recession of any major economy – would be unimaginable.

    Labour is against no deal.

    Firmly and absolutely.

    And the British people would never forgive us if we enabled a no deal outcome.

    There are some that argue Labour should be neutral on this issue.

    To abstain.

    I do not agree.

    Leadership is about taking the tough decisions in the national interest.

    It is about being a serious, responsible opposition.

    A government-in-waiting.

    This is the deal Labour will inherit in 2024.

    It is something we will build on compared to the chaos of no deal.

    The public would expect a labour government to make it work.

    And the EU would expect us to make it work.

    And to use it to protect our shared interests.

    Including the peace process in Northern Ireland.

    At a moment of such national significance, it is not credible for Labour to be on the side lines.

    That is why I can say today that when this deal comes before Parliament, Labour will accept it and vote for it.

    But let me be absolutely clear – and say directly to the Government – up against no deal, we accept this deal, but the consequences of it are yours.

    And yours alone.

    We will hold you to account for it

    Every second you are in power.

    For the promises you have made.

    And the promises you break.

    No longer can you blame somebody else.

    Responsibility for this deal – lies squarely at the door of Number 10.

    I want to address the British people directly.

    I know how tired you are of Brexit.

    The endless negotiations.

    And political squabbles.

    You want to move on.

    You want politicians in Westminster talking about the things that matter to you and your family.

    Securing our economy.

    Protecting our NHS.

    And rebuilding our country.

    Those are my priorities.

    We are a great country.

    We have done extraordinary things.

    Our NHS is the envy of the world.

    British scientists were among the first to discover a coronavirus vaccine.

    I want to be Prime Minister because I believe a better future is possible for our country.

    That we can be even greater than we are today.

    That we can achieve so much more.

    That we can stand proud on the world stage.

    And that we can make Britain the best place to grow up in and the best place to grow old in.

    That is the change I believe in.

    That is the change I want.

    And with Labour under new leadership that is the change we offer.

    Thank you.

  • Boris Johnson – 2020 Statement on UK/EU Trade Deal

    Boris Johnson – 2020 Statement on UK/EU Trade Deal

    The statement made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 24 December 2020.

    It is four and a half years since the British people voted to take back control of their money, their borders, their laws, and their waters and to leave the European Union.

    And earlier this year we fulfilled that promise and we left on Jan 31 with that oven-ready deal.

    Since that time we have been getting on with our agenda.

    Enacting the points based immigration system that you voted for and that will come into force on Jan 1.

    And doing free trade deals with 58 countries around the world.

    And preparing the new relationship with the EU.

    And there have been plenty of people who have told us that the challenges of the Covid pandemic have made this work impossible.

    And that we should extend the transition period.

    And incur yet more delay.

    And I rejected that approach precisely because beating Covid is our number one national priority and I wanted to end any extra uncertainty and to give this country the best possible chance of bouncing back strongly next year.

    And so I am very pleased that this afternoon that we have completed the biggest trade deal yet, worth £660 billion.

    A comprehensive Canada style free trade deal between the UK and the EU, a deal that will protect jobs across this country.

    A deal that will allow UK goods and components to be sold without tariffs and without quotas in the EU market.

    A deal which will if anything should allow our companies and our exporters to do even more business with our European friends.

    And yet which achieves something that the people of this country instinctively knew was doable.

    But which they were told was impossible.

    We have taken back control of laws and our destiny.

    We have taken back control of every jot and tittle of our regulation.

    In a way that is complete and unfettered.

    From Jan 1 we are outside the customs union, and outside the single market.

    British laws will be made solely by the British Parliament.

    Interpreted by UK judges sitting in UK courts.

    And the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice will come to an end.

    We will be able to set our own standards, to innovate in the way that we want, to originate new frameworks for the sectors in which this country leads the world, from biosciences to financial services, artificial intelligence and beyond.

    We will be able to decide how and where we are going to stimulate new jobs and new hope.

    With freeports and new green industrial zones.

    We will be able to cherish our landscape and our environment in the way we choose.

    Backing our farmers and backing British food and agricultural production.

    And for the first time since 1973 we will be an independent coastal state with full control of our waters with the UK’s share of fish in our waters rising substantially from roughly half today to closer to 2/3 in five and a half years’ time after which there is no theoretical limit beyond those placed by science or conservation on the quantity of our own fish that we can fish in our waters.

    And to get ready for that moment those fishing communities we will be helped with a big £100m programme to modernise their fleets and the fish processing industry.

    And I want to stress that although of course the arguments with our European friends and partners were sometimes fierce this is, I believe a good deal for the whole of Europe and for our friends and partners as well.

    Because it will not be a bad thing for the EU to have a prosperous and dynamic and contented UK on your doorstep.

    And it will be a good thing – it will drive jobs and prosperity across the whole continent.

    And I don’t think it will be a bad thing if we in the UK do things differently, or a take a different approach to legislation.

    Because in so many ways our basic goals are the same.

    And in the context of this giant free trade zone that we’re jointly creating the stimulus of regulatory competition will I think benefit us both.

    And if one side believes it is somehow being unfairly undercut by the other, then subject to independent third party arbitration and provided the measures are proportionate, we can either of us decide – as sovereign equals – to protect our consumers.

    But this treaty explicitly envisages that such action should only happen infrequently and the concepts of uniformity and harmonisation are banished in favour of mutual respect and mutual recognition and free trade.

    And for squaring that circle, for finding the philosopher’s stone that’s enabled us to do this I want to thank President von der Leyen of the European Commission and our brilliant negotiators led by Lord Frost and Michel Barnier, on the EU side Stephanie Rousseau as well as Oliver Lewis, Tim Barrow, Lindsay Appleby and many others.

    Their work will be available for scrutiny, followed by a parliamentary vote I hope on Dec 30.

    This agreement, this deal above all means certainty.

    It means certainty for the aviation industry and the hauliers who have suffered so much in the Covid pandemic.

    It means certainty for the police and the border forces and the security services and all those that we rely on across Europe to keep us safe.

    It means certainty for our scientists who will be able to continue to work together on great collective projects.

    Because although we want the UK to be a science superpower, we also want to be a collaborative science superpower.

    And above all it means certainty for business from financial services to our world-leading manufacturers – our car industry – certainty for those working in high skilled jobs in firms and factories across the whole country.

    Because there will be no palisade of tariffs on Jan 1.

    And there will be no non-tariff barriers to trade.

    And instead there will be a giant free trade zone of which we will at once be a member.

    And at the same time be able to do our own free trade deals as one UK, whole and entire, England, NI, Scotland and Wales together.

    And I should stress this deal was done by a huge negotiating team from every part of the UK, and it will benefit every part of our United Kingdom, helping to unite and level up across the country.

    And so I say again directly to our EU friends and partners, I think this deal means a new stability and a new certainty in what has sometimes been a fractious and difficult relationship.

    We will be your friend, your ally, your supporter and indeed – never let it be forgotten – your number one market.

    Because although we have left the EU this country will remain culturally, emotionally, historically, strategically and geologically attached to Europe, not least through the four million EU nationals who have requested to settle in the UK over the last four years and who make an enormous contribution to our country and to our lives.

    And I say to all of you at home.

    At the end of this toughest of years.

    That our focus in the weeks ahead is of course on defeating the pandemic.

    And on beating coronavirus and rebuilding our economy.

    And delivering jobs across the country.

    And I am utterly confident that we can and will do it.

    By today we have vaccinated almost 800,000 people and we have also today resolved a question that has bedevilled our politics for decades.

    And it is up to us all together.

    As a newly and truly independent nation.

    To realise the immensity of this moment and to make the most of it.

    Happy Christmas to you all.

    That’s the good news from Brussels – now for the sprouts.

  • Douglas Chapman – 2020 Comments on Erasmus

    Douglas Chapman – 2020 Comments on Erasmus

    The comments made by Douglas Chapman, the SNP MP for Dunfermline and West Fife, on 24 December 2020.

    A year ago the PM promised in the House of Commons that the Erasmus scheme was safe in his hands. I was apparently “talking out of the back of my neck” for suggesting the disastrous outcome we have today.