Theresa May Warns EU Faces Being 'Crushed Into Tiny
Pieces'
Video - Full Speech 17/01/2017
Theresa May confirms Britain will leave Single Market -
Sets out 12-point Brexit plan :
The Prime Minister used a major speech to warn that the
EU will be torn into "tiny pieces" if it does not become
more flexible, insisting that she will walk away from
negotiations with Brussels if they attempt to give
Britain a “bad deal”.
Posted January 17, 2016
Transcript
A little over six
months ago, the British people voted for change. They
voted to shape a brighter future for our country. They
voted to leave the European Union and embrace the world.
And they did so
with their eyes open: accepting that the road ahead will
be uncertain at times, but believing that it leads
towards a brighter future for their children — and their
grandchildren too.
And it is the
job of this government to deliver it. That means more
than negotiating our new relationship with the EU. It
means taking the opportunity of this great moment of
national change to step back and ask ourselves what kind
of country we want to be.
My answer is
clear. I want this United Kingdom to emerge from this
period of change stronger, fairer, more united and more
outward-looking than ever before. I want us to be a
secure, prosperous, tolerant country — a magnet for
international talent and a home to the pioneers and
innovators who will shape the world ahead. I want us to
be a truly global Britain — the best friend and
neighbour to our European partners, but a country that
reaches beyond the borders of Europe too. A country that
goes out into the world to build relationships with old
friends and new allies alike.
I want Britain
to be what we have the potential, talent and ambition to
be. A great, global trading nation that is respected
around the world and strong, confident and united at
home.
That is why
this government has a plan for Britain. One that gets us
the right deal abroad but also ensures we get a better
deal for ordinary working people at home.
It’s why that
plan sets out how we will use this moment of change to
build a stronger economy and a fairer society by
embracing genuine economic and social reform.
Why our new
modern industrial strategy is being developed, to ensure
every nation and area of the United Kingdom can make the
most of the opportunities ahead. Why we will go further
to reform our schools to ensure every child has the
knowledge and the skills they need to thrive in post-Brexit
Britain. Why as we continue to bring the deficit down,
we will take a balanced approach by investing in our
economic infrastructure — because it can transform the
growth potential of our economy, and improve the quality
of people’s lives across the whole country.
It’s why we
will put the preservation of our precious Union at the
heart of everything we do. Because it is only by coming
together as one great union of nations and people that
we can make the most of the opportunities ahead.
The result of
the referendum was not a decision to turn inward and
retreat from the world. Because Britain’s history and
culture is profoundly internationalist.
We are a
European country — and proud of our shared European
heritage — but we are also a country that has always
looked beyond Europe to the wider world. That is why we
are one of the most racially diverse countries in
Europe, one of the most multicultural members of the
European Union, and why — whether we are talking about
India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, America, Australia, Canada,
New Zealand, countries in Africa or those that are
closer to home in Europe — so many of us have close
friends and relatives from across the world.
Instinctively,
we want to travel to, study in, trade with countries not
just in Europe but beyond the borders of our continent.
Even now as we prepare to leave the EU, we are planning
for the next biennial Commonwealth heads of government
meeting in 2018 — a reminder of our unique and proud
global relationships.
And it is
important to recognise this fact. June the 23rd was not
the moment Britain chose to step back from the world. It
was the moment we chose to build a truly global Britain.
I know that
this — and the other reasons Britain took such a
decision — is not always well understood among our
friends and allies in Europe. And I know many fear that
this might herald the beginning of a greater unravelling
of the EU.
But let me be
clear: I do not want that to happen. It would not be in
the best interests of Britain. It remains overwhelmingly
and compellingly in Britain’s national interest that the
EU should succeed. And that is why I hope in the months
and years ahead we will all reflect on the lessons of
Britain’s decision to leave.
So let me take
this opportunity to set out the reasons for our decision
and to address the people of Europe directly. It’s not
simply because our history and culture is profoundly
internationalist, important though that is. Many in
Britain have always felt that the United Kingdom’s place
in the European Union came at the expense of our global
ties, and of a bolder embrace of free trade with the
wider world.
There are other
important reasons too.
Our political
traditions are different. Unlike other European
countries, we have no written constitution, but the
principle of parliamentary sovereignty is the basis of
our unwritten constitutional settlement. We have only a
recent history of devolved governance — though it has
rapidly embedded itself — and we have little history of
coalition government.
The public
expect to be able to hold their governments to account
very directly, and as a result supranational
institutions as strong as those created by the European
Union sit very uneasily in relation to our political
history and way of life.
And, while I
know Britain might at times have been seen as an awkward
member state, the European Union has struggled to deal
with the diversity of its member countries and their
interests. It bends towards uniformity, not flexibility.
David Cameron’s
negotiation was a valiant final attempt to make it work
for Britain — and I want to thank all those elsewhere in
Europe who helped him reach an agreement — but the blunt
truth, as we know, is that there was not enough
flexibility on many important matters for a majority of
British voters.
Now I do not
believe that these things apply uniquely to Britain.
Britain is not the only member state where there is a
strong attachment to accountable and democratic
government, such a strong internationalist mindset, or a
belief that diversity within Europe should be
celebrated. And so I believe there is a lesson in Brexit
not just for Britain but, if it wants to succeed, for
the EU itself.
Because our
continent’s great strength has always been its
diversity. And there are two ways of dealing with
different interests. You can respond by trying to hold
things together by force, tightening a vice-like grip
that ends up crushing into tiny pieces the very things
you want to protect. Or you can respect difference,
cherish it even, and reform the EU so that it deals
better with the wonderful diversity of its member
states.
So to our
friends across Europe, let me say this. Our vote to
leave the European Union was no rejection of the values
we share. The decision to leave the EU represents no
desire to become more distant to you, our friends and
neighbours. It was no attempt to do harm to the EU
itself or to any of its remaining member states.
We do not want
to turn the clock back to the days when Europe was less
peaceful, less secure and less able to trade freely. It
was a vote to restore, as we see it, our parliamentary
democracy, national self-determination, and to become
even more global and internationalist in action and in
spirit.
We will
continue to be reliable partners, willing allies and
close friends. We want to buy your goods and services,
sell you ours, trade with you as freely as possible, and
work with one another to make sure we are all safer,
more secure and more prosperous through continued
friendship.
You will still
be welcome in this country as we hope our citizens will
be welcome in yours. At a time when together we face a
serious threat from our enemies, Britain’s unique
intelligence capabilities will continue to help to keep
people in Europe safe from terrorism. And at a time when
there is growing concern about European security,
Britain’s servicemen and women, based in European
countries including Estonia, Poland and Romania, will
continue to do their duty.
We are leaving
the European Union, but we are not leaving Europe. And
that is why we seek a new and equal partnership —
between an independent, self-governing, global Britain
and our friends and allies in the EU.
Not partial
membership of the European Union, associate membership
of the European Union, or anything that leaves us
half-in, half-out. We do not seek to adopt a model
already enjoyed by other countries. We do not seek to
hold on to bits of membership as we leave.
No, the United
Kingdom is leaving the European Union. And my job is to
get the right deal for Britain as we do.
So today I want
to outline our objectives for the negotiation ahead. 12
objectives that amount to one big goal: a new, positive
and constructive partnership between Britain and the
European Union.
And as we
negotiate that partnership, we will be driven by some
simple principles: we will provide as much certainty and
clarity as we can at every stage. And we will take this
opportunity to make Britain stronger, to make Britain
fairer, and to build a more global Britain too.
The first
objective is crucial. We will provide certainty wherever
we can. We are about to enter a negotiation. That means
there will be give and take. There will have to be
compromises. It will require imagination on both sides.
And not everybody will be able to know everything at
every stage.
But I recognise
how important it is to provide business, the public
sector, and everybody with as much certainty as possible
as we move through the process.
So where we can
offer that certainty, we will do so. That is why last
year we acted quickly to give clarity about farm
payments and university funding. And it is why, as we
repeal the European Communities Act, we will convert the
“acquis” — the body of existing EU law — into British
law.
This will give
the country maximum certainty as we leave the EU. The
same rules and laws will apply on the day after Brexit
as they did before. And it will be for the British
parliament to decide on any changes to that law after
full scrutiny and proper parliamentary debate.
And when it
comes to Parliament, there is one other way in which I
would like to provide certainty. I can confirm today
that the Government will put the final deal that is
agreed between the UK and the EU to a vote in both
Houses of Parliament, before it comes into force.
There will
have to be compromises. It will require imagination
on both sides. And not everybody will be able to
know everything at every stage
Our second
guiding principle is to build a stronger Britain. That
means taking control of our own affairs, as those who
voted in their millions to leave the European Union
demanded we must.
So we will take
back control of our laws and bring an end to the
jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice in
Britain.
Leaving the
European Union will mean that our laws will be made in
Westminster, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast. And those
laws will be interpreted by judges not in Luxembourg but
in courts across this country. Because we will not have
truly left the European Union if we are not in control
of our own laws.
A stronger
Britain demands that we do something else — strengthen
the precious union between the four nations of the
United Kingdom.
At this
momentous time, it is more important than ever that we
face the future together, united by what makes us
strong: the bonds that unite us as a people, and our
shared interest in the UK being an open, successful
trading nation in the future.
And I hope that
same spirit of unity will apply in Northern Ireland in
particular over the coming months in the assembly
elections, and the main parties there will work together
to re-establish a partnership government as soon as
possible.
Foreign affairs
are of course the responsibility of the UK government,
and in dealing with them we act in the interests of all
parts of the United Kingdom. As prime minister, I take
that responsibility seriously.
I have also
been determined from the start that the devolved
administrations should be fully engaged in this process.
That is why the
government has set up a joint ministerial committee on
EU Negotiations, so ministers from each of the UK’s
devolved administrations can contribute to the process
of planning for our departure from the European Union.
We have already
received a paper from the Scottish government, and look
forward to receiving a paper from the Welsh government
shortly. Both papers will be considered as part of this
important process. We won’t agree on everything, but I
look forward to working with the administrations in
Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland to deliver a Brexit
that works for the whole of the United Kingdom.
Part of that
will mean working very carefully to ensure that — as
powers are repatriated from Brussels back to Britain —
the right powers are returned to Westminster, and the
right powers are passed to the devolved administrations
of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
As we do so,
our guiding principle must be to ensure that — as we
leave the European Union — no new barriers to living and
doing business within our own Union are created.
That means
maintaining the necessary common standards and
frameworks for our own domestic market, empowering the
UK as an open, trading nation to strike the best trade
deals around the world, and protecting the common
resources of our islands.
And as we do
this, I should equally be clear that no decisions
currently taken by the devolved administrations will be
removed from them.
We cannot
forget that, as we leave, the United Kingdom will share
a land border with the EU, and maintaining that common
travel area with the Republic of Ireland will be an
important priority for the UK in the talks ahead.
There has been
a common travel area between the UK and the Republic of
Ireland for many years. Indeed, it was formed before
either of our two countries were members of the European
Union. And the family ties and bonds of affection that
unite our two countries mean that there will always be a
special relationship between us.
So we will work
to deliver a practical solution that allows the
maintenance of the common travel area with the Republic,
while protecting the integrity of the United Kingdom’s
immigration system.
Nobody wants to
return to the borders of the past, so we will make it a
priority to deliver a practical solution as soon as we
can.
The third
principle is to build a fairer Britain. That means
ensuring it is fair to everyone who lives and works in
this country. And that is why we will ensure we can
control immigration to Britain from Europe.
We will
continue to attract the brightest and the best to work
or study in Britain — indeed openness to international
talent must remain one of this country’s most
distinctive assets — but that process must be managed
properly so that our immigration system serves the
national interest.
So we will get
control of the number of people coming to Britain from
the EU. Because while controlled immigration can bring
great benefits — filling skills shortages, delivering
public services, making British businesses the
world-beaters they often are — when the numbers get too
high, public support for the system falters.
In the last
decade or so, we have seen record levels of net
migration in Britain, and that sheer volume has put
pressure on public services, like schools, stretched our
infrastructure, especially housing, and put a downward
pressure on wages for working class people. As Home
Secretary for six years, I know that you cannot control
immigration overall when there is free movement to
Britain from Europe.
Britain is an
open and tolerant country. We will always want
immigration, especially high-skilled immigration, we
will always want immigration from Europe, and we will
always welcome individual migrants as friends. But the
message from the public before and during the referendum
campaign was clear: Brexit must mean control of the
number of people who come to Britain from Europe. And
that is what we will deliver.
Fairness
demands that we deal with another issue as soon as
possible too. We want to guarantee the rights of EU
citizens who are already living in Britain, and the
rights of British nationals in other member states, as
early as we can.
I have told
other EU leaders that we could give people the certainty
they want straight away, and reach such a deal now. Many
of them favour such an agreement; one or two others do
not. But I want everyone to know that it remains an
important priority for Britain — and for many other
member states — to resolve this challenge as soon as
possible. Because it is the right and fair thing to do.
And a fairer
Britain is a country that protects and enhances the
rights people have at work. That is why, as we translate
the body of European law into our domestic regulations,
we will ensure that workers rights are fully protected
and maintained.
Indeed, under
my leadership, not only will the Government protect the
rights of workers’ set out in European legislation, we
will build on them. Because under this Conservative
Government, we will make sure legal protection for
workers keeps pace with the changing labour market — and
that the voices of workers are heard by the boards of
publicly listed companies for the first time.
But the great
prize for this country — the opportunity ahead — is to
use this moment to build a truly global Britain. A
country that reaches out to old friends and new allies
alike. A great, global, trading nation. And one of the
firmest advocates for free trade anywhere in the world.
That starts
with our close friends and neighbours in Europe. So as a
priority, we will pursue a bold and ambitious free-trade
agreement with the European Union.
This agreement
should allow for the freest possible trade in goods and
services between Britain and the EU’s member states. It
should give British companies the maximum freedom to
trade with and operate within European markets — and let
European businesses do the same in Britain.
But I want to
be clear. What I am proposing cannot mean membership of
the single market. European leaders have said many times
that membership means accepting the “four freedoms” of
goods, capital, services and people. And being out of
the EU but a member of the single market would mean
complying with the EU’s rules and regulations that
implement those freedoms, without having a vote on what
those rules and regulations are. It would mean accepting
a role for the European Court of Justice that would see
it still having direct legal authority in our country.
It would to all
intents and purposes mean not leaving the EU at all. And
that is why both sides in the referendum campaign made
it clear that a vote to leave the EU would be a vote to
leave the single market.
So we do not
seek membership of the single market. Instead we seek
the greatest possible access to it through a new,
comprehensive, bold and ambitious free-trade agreement.
That agreement
may take in elements of current single market
arrangements in certain areas — on the export of cars
and lorries for example, or the freedom to provide
financial services across national borders — as it makes
no sense to start again from scratch when Britain and
the remaining member states have adhered to the same
rules for so many years.
But I respect
the position taken by European leaders who have been
clear about their position, just as I am clear about
mine. So an important part of the new strategic
partnership we seek with the EU will be the pursuit of
the greatest possible access to the single market, on a
fully reciprocal basis, through a comprehensive
free-trade agreement.
And because we
will no longer be members of the single market, we will
not be required to contribute huge sums to the EU
budget. There may be some specific European programmes
in which we might want to participate. If so, and this
will be for us to decide, it is reasonable that we
should make an appropriate contribution. But the
principle is clear: the days of Britain making vast
contributions to the European Union every year will end.
But it is not
just trade with the EU we should be interested in. A
global Britain must be free to strike trade agreements
with countries from outside the European Union too.
Because important though our trade with the EU is and
will remain, it is clear that the UK needs to increase
significantly its trade with the fastest growing export
markets in the world.
We will
continue to attract the brightest and the best to
work or study in Britain . . . but that process must
be managed properly so that our immigration system
serves the national interest
Since joining
the EU, trade as a percentage of GDP has broadly
stagnated in the UK. That is why it is time for Britain
to get out into the world and rediscover its role as a
great, global, trading nation.
This is such a
priority for me that when I became prime minister I
established, for the first time, a Department for
International Trade, led by Liam Fox.
We want to get
out into the wider world, to trade and do business all
around the globe. Countries including China, Brazil, and
the Gulf States have already expressed their interest in
striking trade deals with us. We have started
discussions on future trade ties with countries like
Australia, New Zealand and India. And President-elect
Trump has said Britain is not “at the back of the queue”
for a trade deal with the United States, the world’s
biggest economy, but front of the line.
I know my
emphasis on striking trade agreements with countries
outside Europe has led to questions about whether
Britain seeks to remain a member of the EU’s
customs union. And it is true that full customs
union membership prevents us from negotiating our own
comprehensive trade deals.
Now, I want
Britain to be able to negotiate its own trade
agreements. But I also want tariff-free trade with
Europe and cross-border trade there to be as
frictionless as possible.
That means I do
not want Britain to be part of the common commercial
policy and I do not want us to be bound by the common
external tariff. These are the elements of the Customs
Union that prevent us from striking our own
comprehensive trade agreements with other countries. But
I do want us to have a customs agreement with the EU.
Whether that
means we must reach a completely new customs agreement,
become an associate member of the customs union in some
way, or remain a signatory to some elements of it, I
hold no preconceived position. I have an open mind on
how we do it. It is not the means that matter, but the
ends.
And those ends
are clear: I want to remove as many barriers to trade as
possible. And I want Britain to be free to establish our
own tariff schedules at the World Trade Organisation,
meaning we can reach new trade agreements not just with
the European Union but with old friends and new allies
from outside Europe too.
A global
Britain must also be a country that looks to the future.
That means being one of the best places in the world for
science and innovation.
One of our
great strengths as a nation is the breadth and depth of
our academic and scientific communities, backed up by
some of the world’s best universities. And we have a
proud history of leading and supporting cutting-edge
research and innovation.
So we will also
welcome agreement to continue to collaborate with our
European partners on major science, research, and
technology initiatives.
From space
exploration to clean energy to medical technologies,
Britain will remain at the forefront of collective
endeavours to better understand, and make better, the
world in which we live.
And a global
Britain will continue to co-operate with its European
partners in important areas such as crime, terrorism and
foreign affairs.
All of us in
Europe face the challenge of cross-border crime, a
deadly terrorist threat, and the dangers presented by
hostile states. All of us share interests and values in
common, values we want to see projected around the
world.
With the
threats to our common security becoming more serious,
our response cannot be to co-operate with one another
less, but to work together more. I therefore want our
future relationship with the European Union to include
practical arrangements on matters of law enforcement and
the sharing of intelligence material with our EU allies.
I am proud of
the role Britain has played and will continue to play in
promoting Europe’s security. Britain has led Europe on
the measures needed to keep our continent secure —
whether it is implementing sanctions against Russia
following its action in Crimea, working for peace and
stability in the Balkans, or securing Europe’s external
border. We will continue to work closely with our
European allies in foreign and defence policy even as we
leave the EU itself.
These are our
objectives for the negotiation ahead — objectives that
will help to realise our ambition of shaping that
stronger, fairer, global Britain that we want to see.
They are the
basis for a new, strong, constructive partnership with
the European Union — a partnership of friends and
allies, of interests and values. A partnership for a
strong EU and a strong UK.
But there is
one further objective we are setting. For as I have said
before — it is in no one’s interests for there to be a
cliff-edge for business or a threat to stability, as we
change from our existing relationship to a new
partnership with the EU.
By this, I do
not mean that we will seek some form of unlimited
transitional status, in which we find ourselves
stuck forever in some kind of permanent political
purgatory. That would not be good for Britain, but nor
do I believe it would be good for the EU.
Instead, I want
us to have reached an agreement about our future
partnership by the time the two-year Article 50 process
has concluded. From that point onwards, we believe a
phased process of implementation, in which both Britain
and the EU institutions and member states prepare for
the new arrangements that will exist between us will be
in our mutual self-interest. This will give businesses
enough time to plan and prepare for those new
arrangements.
This might be
about our immigration controls, customs systems or the
way in which we co-operate on criminal justice matters.
Or it might be about the future legal and regulatory
framework for financial services. For each issue, the
time we need to phase-in the new arrangements may
differ. Some might be introduced very quickly, some
might take longer. And the interim arrangements we rely
upon are likely to be a matter of negotiation.
But the purpose
is clear: we will seek to avoid a disruptive cliff-edge,
and we will do everything we can to phase in the new
arrangements we require as Britain and the EU move
towards our new partnership.
So, these are
the objectives we have set. Certainty wherever possible.
Control of our own laws. Strengthening the United
Kingdom. Maintaining the common travel area with
Ireland. Control of immigration. Rights for EU nationals
in Britain, and British nationals in the EU. Enhancing
rights for workers. Free trade with European markets.
New trade agreements with other countries. A leading
role in science and innovation. Cooperation on crime,
terrorism and foreign affairs. And a phased approach,
delivering a smooth and orderly Brexit.
This is the
framework of a deal that will herald a new partnership
between the UK and the EU. It is a comprehensive and
carefully considered plan that focuses on the ends, not
just the means — with its eyes fixed firmly on the
future, and on the kind of country we will be once we
leave.
It reflects the
hard work of many in this room today who have worked
tirelessly to bring it together and to prepare this
country for the negotiation ahead. And it will, I know,
be debated and discussed at length. That is only right.
But those who urge us to reveal more — such as the
blow-by-blow details of our negotiating strategy, the
areas in which we might compromise, the places where we
think there are potential trade-offs — will not be
acting in the national interest.
Because this is
not a game or a time for opposition for opposition’s
sake. It is a crucial and sensitive negotiation that
will define the interests and the success of our country
for many years to come. And it is vital that we maintain
our discipline.
That is why I
have said before — and will continue to say — that every
stray word and every hyped up media report is going to
make it harder for us to get the right deal for Britain.
Our opposite numbers in the European Commission know it,
which is why they are keeping their discipline. And the
ministers in this government know it too, which is why
we will also maintain ours.
So however
frustrating some people find it, the government will not
be pressured into saying more than I believe it is in
our national interest to say. Because it is not my job
to fill column inches with daily updates, but to get the
right deal for Britain. And that is what I intend to do.
I am confident
that a deal — and a new strategic partnership between
the UK and the EU — can be achieved.
This is firstly
because, having held conversations with almost every
leader from every single EU member state; having spent
time talking to the senior figures from the European
institutions, including President [Donald] Tusk,
President [Jean-Claude] Juncker, and President [Martin]
Schulz; and after my Cabinet colleagues David Davis,
Philip Hammond and Boris Johnson have done the same with
their interlocutors, I am confident that the vast
majority want a positive relationship between the UK and
the EU after Brexit. And I am confident that the
objectives I am setting out today are consistent with
the needs of the EU and its member states.
That is why our
objectives include a proposed free-trade agreement
between Britain and the European Union, and explicitly
rule out membership of the EU’s Single Market. Because
when the EU’s leaders say they believe the four freedoms
of the Single Market are indivisible, we respect that
position. When the 27 member states say they want to
continue their journey inside the European Union, we not
only respect that fact but support it.
Because we do
not want to undermine the single market, and we do not
want to undermine the European Union. We want the EU to
be a success and we want its remaining member states to
prosper. And of course we want the same for Britain.
And the second
reason I believe it is possible to reach a good deal is
that the kind of agreement I have described today is the
economically rational thing that both Britain and the EU
should aim for. Because trade is not a zero-sum game:
more of it makes us all more prosperous. Free trade
between Britain and the European Union means more trade,
and more trade means more jobs and more wealth creation.
The erection of new barriers to trade, meanwhile, means
the reverse: less trade, fewer jobs, lower growth.
The third and
final reason I believe we can come to the right
agreement is that co-operation between Britain and the
EU is needed not just when it comes to trade but when it
comes to our security too.
Britain and
France are Europe’s only two nuclear powers. We are the
only two European countries with permanent seats on the
United Nations Security Council. Britain’s armed forces
are a crucial part of Europe’s collective defence.
And our
intelligence capabilities — unique in Europe — have
already saved countless lives in very many terrorist
plots that have been thwarted in countries across our
continent. After Brexit, Britain wants to be a good
friend and neighbour in every way, and that includes
defending the safety and security of all of our
citizens.
So I believe
the framework I have outlined today is in Britain’s
interests. It is in Europe’s interests. And it is in the
interests of the wider world.
But I must be
clear. Britain wants to remain a good friend and
neighbour to Europe. Yet I know there are some voices
calling for a punitive deal that punishes Britain and
discourages other countries from taking the same path.
That would be an act of calamitous self-harm for the
countries of Europe. And it would not be the act of a
friend.
Britain would
not — indeed we could not — accept such an approach. And
while I am confident that this scenario need never arise
— while I am sure a positive agreement can be reached —
I am equally clear that no deal for Britain is better
than a bad deal for Britain.
After
Brexit, Britain wants to be a good friend and
neighbour in every way, and that includes defending
the safety and security of all of our citizens
Because we
would still be able to trade with Europe. We would be
free to strike trade deals across the world. And we
would have the freedom to set the competitive tax rates
and embrace the policies that would attract the world’s
best companies and biggest investors to Britain. And —
if we were excluded from accessing the Single Market —
we would be free to change the basis of Britain’s
economic model.
But for the EU,
it would mean new barriers to trade with one of the
biggest economies in the world. It would jeopardise
investments in Britain by EU companies worth more than
half a trillion pounds. It would mean a loss of access
for European firms to the financial services of the City
of London. It would risk exports from the EU to Britain
worth around £290bn every year. And it would disrupt the
sophisticated and integrated supply chains upon which
many EU companies rely.
Important
sectors of the EU economy would also suffer. We are a
crucial — profitable — export market for Europe’s
automotive industry, as well as sectors including
energy, food and drink, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and
agriculture. These sectors employ millions of people
around Europe. And I do not believe that the EU’s
leaders will seriously tell German exporters, French
farmers, Spanish fishermen, the young unemployed of the
eurozone, and millions of others, that they want to make
them poorer, just to punish Britain and make a political
point.
For all these
reasons — and because of our shared values and the
spirit of goodwill that exists on both sides — I am
confident that we will follow a better path. I am
confident that a positive agreement can be reached.
It is right
that the Government should prepare for every eventuality
— but to do so in the knowledge that a constructive and
optimistic approach to the negotiations to come is in
the best interests of Europe and the best interests of
Britain.
We do not
approach these negotiations expecting failure, but
anticipating success. Because we are a great, global
nation with so much to offer Europe and so much to offer
the world.
One of the
world’s largest and strongest economies. With the finest
intelligence services, the bravest armed forces, the
most effective hard and soft power, and friendships,
partnerships and alliances in every continent.
And another
thing that’s important. The essential ingredient of our
success. The strength and support of 65m people willing
us to make it happen. Because after all the division and
discord, the country is coming together. The referendum
was divisive at times. And those divisions have taken
time to heal.
But one of the
reasons that Britain’s democracy has been such a success
for so many years is that the strength of our identity
as one nation, the respect we show to one another as
fellow citizens, and the importance we attach to our
institutions means that when a vote has been held we all
respect the result. The victors have the responsibility
to act magnanimously. The losers have the responsibility
to respect the legitimacy of the outcome. And the
country comes together.
And that is
what we are seeing today. Business isn’t calling to
reverse the result, but planning to make a success of
it. The House of Commons has voted overwhelmingly for us
to get on with it. And the overwhelming majority of
people — however they voted — want us to get on with it
too. So that is what we will do.
Not merely
forming a new partnership with Europe, but building a
stronger, fairer, more Global Britain too. And let that
be the legacy of our time. The prize towards which we
work. The destination at which we arrive once the
negotiation is done.
And let us do
it not for ourselves, but for those who follow. For the
country’s children and grandchildren too. So that when
future generations look back at this time, they will
judge us not only by the decision that we made, but by
what we made of that decision. They will see that we
shaped them a brighter future. They will know that we
built them a better Britain.
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