Brexit: both Tory sides play down risk of no-deal after business alarm
Supporters of the two Conservative leadership
candidates have sought to play down the chances of a no-deal Brexit, after
business groups reiterated their warnings about the economic damage this could
wreak.
Liam Fox, a supporter of Jeremy Hunt – who said on
Sunday he would be willing to tell businesses that went bust because of no deal
that it was a necessary sacrifice – said a new EU commission should be willing
to make a deal.
Meanwhile Matt Hancock, who after dropping out of
the race himself threw his support behind Boris Johnson, said Johnson’s
hard-and-fast deadline of 31 October meant departure with a deal was more
likely.
Business groups and Conservative sources expressed
alarm after Hunt, normally seen as the more moderate of the pair on Brexit,
told the BBC he would push for no deal if, by the start of October, there was
no chance of a new negotiated settlement.
Asked whether he would be willing to look the owners
of family businesses in the eye and say they should be prepared to see their
companies go bust to ensure a no-deal Brexit, Hunt said: “I would do so but I’d
do it with a heavy heart precisely because of the risks.”
Fox, the international trade secretary, said that
while the UK was “not entirely in control” of whether no deal happened, he
believed it would not.
“You have got a new commission coming in, and we
will have a new prime minister. The European Union have to listen to the
economic realities,” he told BBC Radio 5 Live.
“It’s rational. Britain is not asking for anything
that’s unreasonable. We’re simply saying: we have an agreement to leave the
European Union. We want some changes to the backstop arrangement to make it get
through parliament. And then we can leave with a deal, which is in everybody’s
interests.”
However, Fox stressed he would prefer no deal to a
second Brexit referendum.
“It’s up to us to be very clear to the European
Union that we want a deal, but if we can’t get one that’s satisfactory, we
can’t get one that goes through parliament, then the default position within
our law is that we leave without a deal, and we have to make the proper
preparations so that is a credible position,” he said.
Hunt was on Monday due to make a speech setting out
a 10-point plan to mitigate the effects of no deal, including £6bn to protect
fishing and agriculture. It would also include a new, dedicated committee with
special powers to boost no-deal planning and a logistics committee to assist
with imports and exports.
Fox denied no deal would be disastrous, saying: “I’m
not sure it would be catastrophic. I think that there would be problems, and
that’s exactly what Jeremy Hunt is setting out today.”
Hancock, the health secretary, told BBC Radio 4’s
Today programme that Johnson’s pledge to leave on 31 October “do or die”
minimised the risk of no deal.
“The reason that I’m [backing] Boris Johnson is
because I think he’s best placed to deliver Brexit and then to unite the
country,” he said.
“The best way to deliver Brexit is with a deadline,
and Boris is the only candidate with a deadline. No deadline risks no Brexit,
and slip-sliding towards a second referendum, which I don’t want to see.”
Hancock had a very different approach to Brexit when
he was still in the race, and was challenged repeatedly on how he could now
support Johnson. “You’ve got to look forward in life,” he said.
Hancock indicated he still disliked the idea of
proroguing, or suspending, the Commons to stop MPs blocking no deal, but
refused to condemn Johnson for not ruling this out as a tactic.
“I don’t foresee that happening. The whole point of
Brexit – this where he and I strongly agree – is to return parliamentary
sovereignty to the UK,” he said, adding: “I don’t think that that is where this
is going to end up.”
Hancock explained why he was now backing Johnson: “I
clearly made my case to win, and I didn’t get the support in order to be able
to proceed, and then you deal with the world as it is. And you have to ask the
question: who is best placed to deliver Brexit? Answer: Boris Johnson.”
He said: “Part of being able to deliver, when you’re
in government, when you’re in politics, is about uniting people who have a
range of views. And Boris’s ability to bring people behind him from different
parts of the party is a great strength, and by God that’s needed.”