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Farron calls for second European Union referendum on final Brexit deal
Davis, who was flanked by fellow Brexit campaigners Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and International Trade Secretary Liam Fox, also stressed that Brexit simply means leaving the European Union, following Mays Brexit means Brexit slogan.
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She has also said she wants the “best possible deal” for Britain and a “unique” solution rather than an existing model such as Norway or Switzerland.
He also said that one one in every five council houses sold under the Right to Buy scheme, which was introduced by her predecessor David Cameron, was short of the government’s one-for-one pledge.
“Mr Speaker, what we do know is whoever wins the Labour leadership, we are not going to let them anywhere near power again”, she said. “So can the Prime Minister tell the House what the Government’s policy actually is?”
“It seems completely wrong for an unelected Prime Minister to enforce a deal on the British people that neither the 52% nor the 48% voted for”.
In her first ever firm stance on the tough question of how to tighten border controls with the EU, British Prime Minister Theresa May has straight-forwardly rejected a “points-based” system to screen immigrants.
“By building on existing partnerships, forging new relationships and shaping an ambitious global role, we will make a success of Brexit – for Britain and for all our partners – and we will continue to strengthen the prosperity and security of all our citizens for generations to come”.
During her visit to China, she ruled out the introduction of an Australian-style points-based system for immigration policy as proposed by the Leave campaign, saying it was “not a silver bullet” to reduce the numbers coming to the UK.
Mr Robertson claimed so far the Government had only come up with “waffle” about the post-Brexit plan.
Neither he nor Theresa May is anywhere near deciding where their bottom lines will eventually settle on the issues of immigration and access to the single market – nor would either be ready to reveal their hand to the other if decisions had been taken.
Farage may be anxious that May’s insistence on the government being “able to decide” is a way to give herself wiggle room in upcoming negotiations with the EU.
There was also a suggestion from former Conservative Cabinet minister Owen Paterson that the United Kingdom could accept all European Union laws onto the statute book before abolishing the ones it did not want.
Scotland’s pro-EU leader Nicola Sturgeon has criticised the government and today, she told BBC Radio Scotland she wanted Britain to remain in the single market, implying this could be the test for whether she would call for another independence referendum.
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“It wouldn’t be right for me or this government to give a running commentary on negotiations”.