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Sajid Javid prepared to leave EU without a deal | Sajid Javid prepared to leave EU without a deal |
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The home secretary, Sajid Javid, is prepared to take Britain out of the EU without a deal if he becomes prime minister and fails to get concessions from Brussels. | The home secretary, Sajid Javid, is prepared to take Britain out of the EU without a deal if he becomes prime minister and fails to get concessions from Brussels. |
The Tory leadership hopeful has ruled out a second referendum, a general election, and revoking article 50, instead promising to leave the EU on 31 October – with or without a deal. | The Tory leadership hopeful has ruled out a second referendum, a general election, and revoking article 50, instead promising to leave the EU on 31 October – with or without a deal. |
Writing in the Daily Mail, he said: “The voters have been asked their opinion more than enough times. Never in this country’s history have we asked people to go to the polls a second time without implementing their verdict from the first. | Writing in the Daily Mail, he said: “The voters have been asked their opinion more than enough times. Never in this country’s history have we asked people to go to the polls a second time without implementing their verdict from the first. |
“Another vote before we leave would be disastrous for trust in politics, and cause the kind of chaos that risks handing Jeremy Corbyn and his hard-left supporters the keys to No 10.” | “Another vote before we leave would be disastrous for trust in politics, and cause the kind of chaos that risks handing Jeremy Corbyn and his hard-left supporters the keys to No 10.” |
Javid, who is one of a dozen Conservatives hoping to become the next prime minister, set out a five-point plan to get the UK out of the EU. | Javid, who is one of a dozen Conservatives hoping to become the next prime minister, set out a five-point plan to get the UK out of the EU. |
The environment secretary’s campaign plan was knocked off course by revelations about drug-taking. | |
He has sought to regain his place as the leading ‘Stop Boris’ with a series of policy pledges, from a new social insurance to pay for social care, to changing human rights law to prevent service personnel being pursued over historical crimes. He has better Brexiter credentials than Hunt, is liked by the moderate wing of the party, and is a better orator than almost any other candidate. | |
He has played up his senior role in the Vote Leave campaign, saying he had ‘led from the front’ because he believed it was ‘the right thing to do, at a critical moment in our history’. | |
On Brexit he has publicly discussed the idea of extending the Brexit deadline slightly beyond 31 October, if needed to finalise a deal. Has not completely ruled out a no-deal Brexit. | |
He received 37 votes in the first round, coming third. | He received 37 votes in the first round, coming third. |
The foreign secretary has made the case that he is the most serious and experienced would-be leader, in an apparent rebuke to his main rival, Boris Johnson. | |
On Brexit he believes a new deal is possible by 31 October, and would send a new, cross-party negotiating team to Brussels. Would countenance leaving EU without a deal, but has warned that could lead to a confidence vote and potentially an election. | |
Hunt’s problem is he is seen as the continuity candidate, the safe pair of hands, when colleagues are starting to see the attraction of a new style. | |
He received 43 votes in the first round, placing him second. | He received 43 votes in the first round, placing him second. |
Javid struggled to define himself in the first days of the campaign, not a fresh face, not a safe pair of hands, or a true Brexit believer. But his campaign picked up, with the endorsement of popular Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson, a polished leadership video telling the moving story of his background, and a lively launch speech. It was still only enough to place him fifth, though. | |
On Brexit, Javid says he wants to leave with a deal, but has talked down the idea of another extension and would be prepared to opt for no deal. | |
He is expected to make a new push to define himself as the change candidate who can talk to Tory voters in new places – though he may also be tempted to drop out to tuck in behind one of the frontrunners. It is hard to see how he could make it into the final two from this position. | |
He received 23 votes in the first round. | He received 23 votes in the first round. |
The former foreign secretary already has enough support to progress through to the members’ ballot. All Johnson needs to do is sit tight, keep his MPs sweet and try not to ruin it for himself. He has kept a low profile in the media and stayed in the tearooms and in his office, methodically talking round colleagues. His team know that one negative news cycle because of an off-guard comment could see his star plummet – and Johnson is more prone to those than most. | |
On Brexit he has promised the UK will leave the EU on 31 October, come what may, even without a deal if a new agreement cannot be reached in time. | |
Johnson won the first round with 114 votes. | Johnson won the first round with 114 votes. |
The former Brexit secretary has had a rocky start to his campaign after telling broadcasters he was not a feminist and missing out on a slew of endorsements from the Brexiter right of the party, which instead went to Boris Johnson | |
On Brexit Raab has said he would actively seek a no-deal departure, and has repeatedly refused to rule out proroguing parliament to make sure MPs could not block this. ‘We’ve been humiliated as a country in these talks with the EU,’ he said. ‘We’re divided at home, and demeaned abroad.’ | |
His limited chance of success really now depends on whether Johnson stumbles and a more moderate candidate gains momentum, in which case Raab could be the beneficiary. | |
Raab got 27 votes in the first round. | Raab got 27 votes in the first round. |
Stewart said he was ‘over the moon’ to scrape into the next round of voting with 19 votes, one-sixth of Johnson’s tally, and insisted afterwards he could still make the final two. He still has a mountain to climb to get into the next round, where he will need to get another 14 endorsements – and avoid coming last – or he will be automatically eliminated. | |
The safe money would say it is likely that he will not make it through the next round, yet it is just about possible that his mounting popularity with the public could convince colleagues to take a gamble on him if they hope to find an outsider with a chance of beating Johnson. | |
On Brexit he is by far the softest of the candidates – he so vehemently rules out no deal that he has discussed holding an impromptu parliament elsewhere in Westminster if a new PM opted to prorogue the Commons. | |
Stewart got 19 votes in the first round. | Stewart got 19 votes in the first round. |
He said he would prepare for a no-deal Brexit with an emergency budget, which he noted would show the EU “we are ready – so when we turn up to negotiate, they know we are not afraid of walking out”. He said he did not want to leave the EU without a deal, but “we have to accept the reality of our situation”. | He said he would prepare for a no-deal Brexit with an emergency budget, which he noted would show the EU “we are ready – so when we turn up to negotiate, they know we are not afraid of walking out”. He said he did not want to leave the EU without a deal, but “we have to accept the reality of our situation”. |
The home secretary said he planned to get his deal through parliament with a Northern Ireland backstop that included a time limit or exit clause, and vowed to work closely with Ireland to ensure there was a frictionless border. | The home secretary said he planned to get his deal through parliament with a Northern Ireland backstop that included a time limit or exit clause, and vowed to work closely with Ireland to ensure there was a frictionless border. |
“What’s currently missing is trust in our ability and determination to deliver that. That requires two things. Someone who could work with them constructively, building a strong relationship of personal trust. And a credible solution,” he wrote. | “What’s currently missing is trust in our ability and determination to deliver that. That requires two things. Someone who could work with them constructively, building a strong relationship of personal trust. And a credible solution,” he wrote. |
Javid added that he had tasked a team from Border Force to look into this issue at the Home Office which, he said, insisted the technologies already existed to avoid a hard border. | Javid added that he had tasked a team from Border Force to look into this issue at the Home Office which, he said, insisted the technologies already existed to avoid a hard border. |
The 49-year-old is up against other contenders including Boris Johnson, Rory Stewart and Michael Gove to replace Theresa May. On Friday, the former immigration minister Mark Harper became the 12th MP to enter the race. | The 49-year-old is up against other contenders including Boris Johnson, Rory Stewart and Michael Gove to replace Theresa May. On Friday, the former immigration minister Mark Harper became the 12th MP to enter the race. |
The Foreign Office minister Sir Alan Duncan said the number of candidates in the leadership race was becoming “a bit silly”. | The Foreign Office minister Sir Alan Duncan said the number of candidates in the leadership race was becoming “a bit silly”. |
He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “This is a very, very serious moment where we are choosing our next prime minister at the most difficult political time, so anyone who is a candidate has to go straight from wherever they are through the door of No 10.” He said the list needed to be thinned out, as “serious debate” was being crowded out. | He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “This is a very, very serious moment where we are choosing our next prime minister at the most difficult political time, so anyone who is a candidate has to go straight from wherever they are through the door of No 10.” He said the list needed to be thinned out, as “serious debate” was being crowded out. |
Javid also pledged to hire 20,000 extra police officers if elected prime minister, promising to spend £1bn over three years to put “police on the beat” and end a “culture of impunity” among criminals. | Javid also pledged to hire 20,000 extra police officers if elected prime minister, promising to spend £1bn over three years to put “police on the beat” and end a “culture of impunity” among criminals. |
Sajid Javid | Sajid Javid |
Brexit | Brexit |
Conservative leadership | Conservative leadership |
Conservatives | Conservatives |
European Union | European Union |
Foreign policy | Foreign policy |
Article 50 | Article 50 |
news | news |
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