Theresa
May refused to commit to giving MPs a vote on her Brexit strategy despite
growing Tory calls for more clarity on the plan
|
Britain is facing a
"divorce bill" of up to €20 billion (£18 billion) as the cost of
leaving the European Union, it has been reported.
Press
Association report continues:
The
Financial Times has calculated that more than €300 billion (£270 billion) of
shared payment liabilities will have to be settled in Brexit negotiations.
The
€20 billion "upper estimate" was said to cover the UK's share of
continuing multi-year liabilities including €241 billion (£217 billion) of
unpaid budget appropriations, pension liabilities of €63.8 billion (£57.5
billion), and other commitments totalling around €32 billion (£29 billion).
The
FT said its analysis represented the first attempt to quantify the UK's
liabilities on leaving the EU, with some officials in Brussels warning that the
final figure could be higher.
The
Government refused to be drawn on the report. A spokesman said: "As the
Prime Minister has said, we will invoke Article 50 no later than the end of
March next year. We are not going to provide a running commentary on leaving
the EU."
The
disclosure may cause further jitters on foreign exchange markets following a
tumultuous day for the pound.
At
one point on Wednesday sterling lost almost 1% of its value against the dollar
during the course of exchanges in the Commons, before staging a rally.
Theresa
May is continuing her mini-tour of European capitals ahead of the EU summit
later this month with talks in Madrid with Spanish prime minister Mariano
Rajoy, while Boris Johnson makes his first appearance before the Commons
Foreign Affairs Committee since becoming Foreign Secretary.
The
Prime Minister has angered many Conservative backbenchers with her refusal to
commit to giving MPs a vote on her Brexit strategy despite growing calls for
more clarity on the plan before the formal process of leaving the EU is
triggered.
During
an at times heated Commons debate called by Labour, a series of Tory MPs lined
up to insist that greater transparency was essential to protect British jobs,
businesses and investment.
Challenged
at Prime Minister's Questions, Mrs May insisted suggestions that Parliament
would be unable to debate issues around Brexit were "completely
wrong".
However
she came under pressure from Jeremy Corbyn, who said the Prime Minister was
pursuing a "shambolic Tory Brexit" to appease her backbenchers.
The
Labour leader said the Government offers "no strategy for negotiating
Brexit and offers no clarity, no transparency and no chance of scrutiny of the
process for developing a strategy".
Meanwhile,
the Open Britain campaign highlighted 2008 comments in which Mrs May backed
parliamentary votes to define Britain's negotiating position in the EU.
She
told MPs they should have "a statutory scrutiny reserve so that ministers
would have to gain parliamentary approval before negotiations" with other
EU member states.
Commenting
for Open Britain, Labour MP Phil Wilson said: "The Government's
negotiating hand would be strengthened if they had clear plans backed by a
strong parliamentary mandate.
"This
is something the Prime Minister used to support. I hope ministers will now
listen to MPs on all sides and give Parliament a vote on the terms of their
Brexit negotiations."
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