British Prime Minister Theresa May has hit back at critics of her handling of Brexit, writing in the Sunday Telegraph that she had “proven the doubters wrong” after securing an interim deal.
Pressure lifted on the embattled leader after she struck a deal with the EU over Britain’s divorce terms on Friday, enabling talks to turn to the country’s future trading relationship after months of fraught negotiations.
“We have proven the doubters wrong and are making progress towards a successful exit from the EU,” she wrote in the center-right broadsheet, calling the agreement “a watershed” in negotiations.
“Amid all the noise, we are getting on with the job,” she added. “We will not be derailed from this fundamental duty to deliver the democratic will of the British people.”
The British prime minister said it was important to work out the exact terms of an implementation period, designed to soften the effects of Brexit after the March 2019 leave date, “as soon as possible ... to provide invaluable certainty for employers.”
She also played down fears of Brexit voters that Britain would end up being bound by EU rules, saying that the country would regain “control of our borders and set our own laws.”
However, prominent Brexit campaigners in her Cabinet appeared concerned that Britain would be restricted by EU rules during the transition period, which is expected to last for about two years.
British Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs Boris Johnson told the Sunday Times that Britain risked becoming a “vassal state” of Europe if it did not fully leave the jurisdiction of European courts or the customs union, which would prevent it from striking trade deals with other countries.
His comments came shortly after British Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond said Britain would “effectively replicate the status quo” during the transition period, highlighting May’s task in uniting her Cabinet ahead of the second phase of negotiations.
May also faces battles with her own MPs, 11 of whom rebelled last week to deliver the government a damaging parliamentary defeat on the bill that would enshrine Brexit into domestic law
A BMG Research poll for the Independent newspaper yesterday found that 51 percent of Britons favored staying in the EU compared with 41 percent who backed Brexit, the widest margin since the June last year vote — although the poll was carried out before the interim deal was announced.
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