A no-deal Brexit would be a “catastrophe” and the Prime Minister should drop this option as there is “no time to waste”, the Scottish and Welsh first ministers have said.
In a joint statement, the political leader for Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon, and her Welsh counterpart, Mark Drakeford, called on Theresa May to take the no-deal option off the table and put forward legislation to scrap March 29 as the day the UK leaves the EU.
They also called for her to request an extension to the Article 50 deadline and drop her red lines in Brexit negotiations.
The statement said: “We are particularly keen to do so to press home the point that all the evidence we have seen to date suggests that the UK is simply not prepared for a no-deal Brexit in less than two months’ time.
“Our firm view is that such an outcome to the Brexit negotiations would be a catastrophe which would cause significant short-term disruption to the lives of ordinary citizens as well as to businesses and long-term harm to our economy.
“And while a longer period to prepare for no deal as proposed by some Conservative MPs might reduce the risk of people in Scotland and Wales being unable to access the medicines that they need or the range of foods they want to buy, it would do nothing to mitigate the longer-term economic damage that such a radical rupture with our EU neighbours would cause.
“The jobs lost at Schaeffler in Llanelli and the cancelled investment at Nissan in Sunderland are just a foretaste of the future. The CBI has estimated a no-deal Brexit could cost the Scottish economy £14 billion a year by 2034.”
The statement highlighted the House of Commons, Welsh Assembly and the Scottish Parliament have all rejected Mrs May’s deal and her government “appears unable” to identify alternative arrangements to the Irish backstop to enable the deal to pass through Parliament.
It continued: “The point has been reached where there is now no time to waste.
“We therefore renew our call for the Prime Minister to make clear that she and her Government will ensure ‘no deal’ is taken off the table.
“This should include putting forward secondary legislation now to remove 29 March 2019 as Exit Day from the EU (Withdrawal) Act.
“The Prime Minister must also request an extension from the EU of the Article 50 deadline.
“We call on the Prime Minister to request such an extension immediately to put an end to the threat of the UK crashing out of the EU without a deal in only eight weeks’ time.”
The statement concluded: “The EU has made it clear that in terms of negotiations on the future relationship, it would respond favourably if the Prime Minister was to drop her ‘red lines’.
“We therefore further call on the UK Government to abandon those red lines, which the EU has repeatedly said severely restrict the possible outcomes of Brexit.”
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