International

Bid to block no-deal Brexit by stopping govt funds

Bid to block no-deal Brexit by stopping govt funds

June 27, 2019 | 11:16 PM
Conservative leadership candidate Boris Johnson looks through a binoculars on the bridge of the Isle of Wight ferry as it sets sail from Portsmouth, southern England, yesterday.
Pro-European Union lawmakers will seek next week to block a new prime minister from taking Britain out of the European Union without a deal and against the will of parliament by trying to cut off some of the government’s funding.Former Conservative attorney general Dominic Grieve and former Labour foreign secretary Margaret Beckett have tabled an amendment to routine finance legislation — dubbed estimates — that was set to be nodded through early next week.Senior veteran Conservative lawmaker Ken Clarke added his influential weight to their bid, saying he would vote for the amendment.The change aims at denying funds to certain government departments unless parliament has ratified a deal, or Withdrawal Agreement, with the EU, or lawmakers have agreed to Britain leaving without a deal.“The suggestion that we could or should be taken out of the EU without the consent of the House of Commons is fundamentally wrong, and frankly unconstitutional,” Grieve told The Sun.Clarke, 78, asked by reporters if he would vote with Grieve, said: “Yes, I have always voted with all those votes...and I hope they eventually find some procedural device (to stop no deal).”He added: “It is just unthinkable that the government could take us out with no-deal, without a majority and we’ve slowly got more people to pluck up courage on no-deal. We have a majority of about 100 in the (650-seat) House of Commons against leaving with no-deal.”A spokeswoman for Prime Minister Theresa May said such a funding block would be “grossly irresponsible”.“This is government spending for this financial year and funds crucial areas like schools, housing and welfare,” the spokeswoman said, adding that it was not yet clear whether the amendment would be selected for debate.The move comes after both candidates to replace May as prime minister have said they would oversee a no-deal Brexit if forced to.Boris Johnson has pledged to leave the EU with or without a deal on October 31 if he wins.His rival Jeremy Hunt has said he would, if absolutely necessary, go for a no-deal Brexit. Earlier Johnson took aim at Hunt, saying the governing Conservative Party would suffer if a new leader treated the October 31 Brexit deadline as a “fake” target. Johnson has made a “do or die” pledge to take Britain out of the European Union on October 31, saying the government must speed up preparations for leaving without a deal to put pressure on Brussels to offer up a new Brexit agreement.“If we fail again, if we kick the can down the road on October 31, if we continue to delay, if we treat this as a fake deadline, just yet another rigmarole, then I think the voters will be very frustrated indeed,” he told the Conservative Home website in an interview published yesterday.“And I think that our party, the Conservative Party, which I fought for for a very long time across this country, I think that we will not easily recover.”
June 27, 2019 | 11:16 PM