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May tells business leaders her plan is best for jobs

Prime Minister Theresa May speaking at the CBI annual conference at InterContinental Hotel in London Picture by Stefan Rousseau/PA
Prime Minister Theresa May speaking at the CBI annual conference at InterContinental Hotel in London Picture by Stefan Rousseau/PA Prime Minister Theresa May speaking at the CBI annual conference at InterContinental Hotel in London Picture by Stefan Rousseau/PA

THERESA May said her Brexit plan was the best for jobs across the UK as she battled to keep her own post in No 10.

In a message to her political rivals, the prime minister stressed that Brexit was not an exercise in “political theory” but affected people’s lives and livelihoods.

In Brussels the European Union’s chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, said the Brexit process was at a “key moment” and urged all sides to remain “calm”.

One of the remaining details to be resolved is how long an extension to the transition period – effectively keeping the UK aligned with the EU after Brexit – could last.

There has been speculation that a one-off extension, if sought when the agreed transition period expires at the end of 2020, could last until the end of 2022.

But Mrs May said she wanted it to be over by the time of the next scheduled general election in June 2022, while Mr Barnier said an extension could not be “indefinite” and a deadline would be decided in talks this week.

The PM took her Brexit message to the CBI conference as she sought to win business backing for her plans.

CBI director-general Carolyn Fairbairn told the event in east London: “It is a compromise. But it is hard-won progress.”

She said firms were already spending hundreds of millions on preparations for a no-deal Brexit.

In her keynote speech, Mrs May said: “We are not talking about political theory, but the reality of people’s lives and livelihoods. Jobs depend on us getting this right.

“And what we have agreed unashamedly puts our future economic success, and the livelihoods of working families up and down this country, first.”

But Brexit-supporting businessman Roger Kendrick challenged the prime minister over her plans, which he said would restrict the ability to strike trade deals with countries outside the EU, telling Mrs May: “Think again about the economics of the whole thing.”

Mrs May told him “the portrayal that you have given of what has been agreed is a little inaccurate”, adding “it makes sense for us to continue having a good trading relationship with the European Union... but also have the freedom, which we will have, to sign those trade deals around the rest of the world”.

In Brussels Mr Barnier updated the 27 remaining EU nations’ ministers on the state of the Brexit process.

Austrian EU minister Gernot Blumel said “we have the divorce papers on the table, 45 years of difficult marriage are coming to an end”.

The question of Mrs May’s survival is one that the EU27 are watching closely as Tory rebels continued to attack her plan.

The message from both the PM and the EU27 representatives in Brussels was that there could be no unpicking of the divorce deal, although work on the blueprint for the future relationship continues.

Mrs May said the withdrawal agreement had been “agreed in full” by both sides.

But there was still no certainty over the extent of the revolt against Mrs May’s leadership in the Tory ranks.

So far, 23 MPs have publicly confirmed that they have sent in letters calling for a confidence vote, with others widely rumoured to have done so, still short of the 48 required to trigger a ballot.

The British prime minister might be struggling to garner enough support among Tory party colleagues by Tánaiste Simon Coveney was seen to voice his support.


Mr Coveney told RTÉ News: "People have underestimated Theresa May over and over again. I think they're wrong to. I think she is a very steely, determined person.


"I think she has got a good deal for Britain, for the United Kingdom as a whole I should say, and she has followed through also on her commitments to Ireland and the EU."


The Tánaiste made his comments following a meeting with EU chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier and minister of state for European Affairs Helen McEntee.