Britain PM rejects calls for general election over Brexit
Wednesday, 26th September 2018
United Kingdom: While talking to reporters on a flight to New York ahead of the 73rd United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday the Britain Prime Minister Theresa May has rejected Labour Party's demands for an early general election, saying a snap vote "would not be in the national interest".
Jeremy Corbyn a Labour leader believes that a general election would be the best way to resolve the political crisis enveloping the Brexit negotiations, after EU leaders rejected the prime minister's Chequers plan in Salzburg last week.
Senior Conservative Brexiteers are piling pressure on her to ditch the proposal in favour of a Canada-style deal, as advised by the Institute for Economic Affairs (IEA).
"What I'm doing is working to deliver a good deal with Europe in the national interest, it would not be in the national interest to have a general election," said Theresa May.
The Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab said the idea was "for the birds" and was "not going to happen".
The prime minister will attempt to reassure business leaders on Wednesday that the UK services industry and London's role as a financial centre will stay "the envy of the world" after Brexit.
May is expected to tell the Bloomberg Global Business Forum in New York that "post-Brexit Britain will be an unequivocally pro-business Britain".
She will go on to say she has a plan for an economy that is "knowledge-rich, highly-innovative, highly-skilled and high quality but with low tax and smart regulation".
The prime minister is expected to say: "Whatever your business, investing in a post-Brexit Britain will give you the lowest rate of corporation tax in the G20.
The prime minister is expected to acknowledge Brexit negotiations are at a critical stage, but will say she remains confident of a deal.
Prominent Brexiteers David Davis and Jacob Rees-Mogg are among those who support ditching the Chequers plan and replicating the existing Canada model.
They argue it would give the UK greater scope to diverge from EU rules and that additional friction at borders could be minimised through trust trader schemes, product bar coding and other non-border checks
The prime minister has responded by saying a "no-deal" Brexit would be better than the proposal favoured by rebel Leave supporters.
"I've always said no deal is better than a bad deal, and I think a bad deal, for example, would be something that broke up the United Kingdom,” said May.
"What we've put on the table is a good deal” she added.
"It's a deal which retains the union of the UK, our constitutional integrity, it's a deal which provides for no hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland, protects jobs and enables us to have a good trade relationship with Europe and the rest of the world."
EU leaders have argued that May's Chequers plan would risk undermining the integrity of the single market.
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