British PM Recruits New Brexit Secretary After Shocking Late-Night Resignation

LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 09: Dominic Raab leaves Number 10 Downing Street after being appointed Brexit Secretary by British Prime Minster Theresa May on July 9, 2018 in London, England. Last night David Davis quit as B... LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 09: Dominic Raab leaves Number 10 Downing Street after being appointed Brexit Secretary by British Prime Minster Theresa May on July 9, 2018 in London, England. Last night David Davis quit as Brexit Secretary over his opposition to Mrs May's plan for the UK's future relations with the EU. (Photo by Jack Taylor/Getty Images) MORE LESS
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LONDON (AP) — Britain and the European Union insisted Monday that their divorce negotiations remain on track, after the resignation of the U.K.’s top Brexit official shook Prime Minister Theresa May’s fragile grip on power.

May appointed staunchly pro-Brexit lawmaker Dominic Raab as the country’s new Brexit secretary, hours after the late-night resignation of his predecessor David Davis.

Davis said he could not support May’s plan to maintain close trade and regulatory ties with the EU — a proposal agreed by the Cabinet after a marathon meeting Friday. Steve Baker, a junior Brexit minister also resigned.

The resignations dealt yet another blow to the beleaguered leader, just two days after she announced she had finally united her quarrelsome government behind her plan for a divorce deal with the EU.

Less than nine months remain until Britain leaves the bloc on March 29, 2019, and the EU has warned Britain repeatedly that time is running out to seal a divorce deal.

Britain and the EU hope to reach broad agreement by October so that EU national parliaments can ratify a deal before Britain leaves. That timetable looks increasingly optimistic, but European Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas said the EU was available “available 24/7.”

Schinas said the bloc “will continue to negotiate in good will, bona fide, with Prime Minister Theresa May and the U.K. government negotiators in order to reach a deal.”

May’s official spokesman, James Slack, said Britain wanted to “move forward at pace” in the negotiations.

“There is now a new secretary of state and we look forward to moving on,” he said.

During a 12-hour meeting on Friday, May’s fractious Cabinet — including Davis — finally agreed on a plan for future trade ties with the EU.

The plan seeks to keep the U.K. and the EU in a free-trade zone for goods, and commits Britain to maintaining the same rules as the bloc for goods and agricultural products.

Some Brexit-supporting lawmakers are angry at the proposals, saying they will keep Britain tethered to the bloc and unable to change its rules to strike new trade deals around the world.

In his resignation letter, Davis said the “‘common rule book’ policy hands control of large swathes of our economy to the EU and is certainly not returning control of our laws in any real sense.”

Davis said Monday that he believed Britain was “giving too much away, too easily” in the exit talks, saying that May’s plan “would be a risk at least of delivering a poor outcome.”

Davis departure was hailed by pro-Brexit Conservative lawmakers, who have long considered May too prone to compromise with the EU. They believe the proposals breach several of the “red lines” the government has set out, including a commitment to leave the bloc’s tariff-free customs union.

Some euroskeptic lawmakers dream of replacing May with a staunch Brexiteer, such as Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, who in the past has disagreed publicly with his boss.

Johnson has not commented publicly since Friday.

Davis said he did not want his resignation to become a rallying cry for May’s ouster.

“I like Theresa May, I think she’s a good prime minister,” Davis said.

Davis did not urge other ministers to resign, saying he was in a unique position because the Brexit secretary’s job is to sell the government’s policy.

“I’d have to deliver this. I’d have to do something I didn’t believe in,” he told the BBC. “That’s not a tenable position. … Others don’t have that same responsibility.”

But leading pro-Brexit legislator Jacob Rees-Mogg said “I don’t think a no-confidence vote is immediately in the offing.” He urged May to abandon her plans and take a tougher line with Brussels.

“Friday’s announcement was turning red lines into a white flag, and David Davis has made that so clear in his resignation letter,” Rees-Mogg said.

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Notable Replies

  1. Boris Johnson just resigned.

  2. Moscow seems to have found a cheap, effective and deniable way to destroy Western democracies through perverting their election systems. When Brexit blew up in Cameron’s face, he was gone in hours. It was funny enough the morning after, when people who had just voted were googling “What is the EU?” Today we see the government asking, “What is it we are supposed to be doing exactly?” Cyberfog, a transient dementia, can now apparently be targeted rather effectively at the information flows of any group.

    Here was David Davis’ own comment on the chaos within the cabinet:
    In his resignation letter, Mr Davis told Mrs May that

    “the current trend of policy and tactics” was making it “look less and less likely” that the UK would leave the customs union and single market."

  3. Idiots.
    Britain has no bargaining power here.
    Maybe they can strike a good deal with Putin, but I doubt it. I expect they will have to grovel for crumbs just like Trump.
    Edited to add: The only power they might have is to threaten to stay as I think the EU is now more that ready to be rid of this 100 years ago has-been country.

  4. As screwed as we are with the Mango Menace, Britain is in many ways even more worse off with this ongoing trainwreck happening to it. Putin managed to turn the ignorance of the at-large British populace into an absolutely disastrous policy that most Britons don’t realize will marginalize them, not enable them to negotiate any significant deals on their own. I have to hand it to Putin - he’s an evil bastard but he has played the western democracies like a well-tuned fiddle, destabilizing us all through the ignorance of the few rubes who managed to get worked up enough to steal what is not rightfully theirs from the rest of us. NATO will be next if he gets his way.

  5. Since Johnson is a big fan of Trump’s - prepare for tweetstorm in 3… 2… 1…

    Or it could be worse! - ‘the Donald’ will be in England this week - any bets Johnson’s resignation will inspire a very public bout of foot-in-mouth disease?

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