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Brexit news – live: Labour seeks extension to transition period to avoid no-deal, as Tory MPs demand Big Ben chimes to mark exit

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Adam Forrest
Friday 03 January 2020 17:10 GMT
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Who will replace Jeremy Corbyn as Labour leader?

Jeremy Corbyn tabled an amendment to Boris Johnson’s EU Withdrawal Bill seeking a two-year extension to the transition period after Brexit – an attempt by Labour to avoid a no-deal crash-out at the end of 2020 if a trade deal cannot be done in time.

Mr Johnson’s chief adviser Dominic Cummings came under fire over his plans for a radical shake-up of the civil service. His blog post urging only “weirdos and misfits with odd skills” to apply for roles in Downing Street was widely mocked online.

It came as Labour leadership candidates and potential contenders condemned the US strike on Iran’s top general, with Jess Phillips expected to announce her bid to succeed Mr Corbyn as party leader on Friday evening.

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Good morning and welcome to The Independent’s live coverage of British politics, as the Labour leadership race hots up ahead of MPs return to parliament next week.

Adam Forrest3 January 2020 08:13
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Labour proposes two-year delay to prevent no-deal

A fresh attempt to avoid a no-deal Brexit at the end of 2020 will be made by Labour when key legislation returns to the Commons.

Jeremy Corbyn has tabled an amendment seeking, from mid-June, a two-year extension to the implementation period which runs out at the end of December.

Such talks for an extension would not be required if an agreement on the future trade relationship has been concluded or the Commons has passed a motion approving the government’s intention not to apply for an extension.

An explanatory statement on the proposal reads: “This new clause would restore the role for Parliament in deciding whether to extend transition to avoid a WTO (World Trade Organisation) Brexit.”

Boris Johnson has insisted he believes a trade deal with the EU can be agreed before the transition period expires. But critics fear the 11-month timetable is too tight and could lead to Brexit without a UK-EU trade deal in place.

Labour’s amendment, tabled in the name of outgoing leader Jeremy Corbyn, states: “A minister of the Crown must seek to secure agreement in the joint committee to a single decision to extend the implementation period by two years, in accordance with Article 132 of the Withdrawal Agreement unless one or more condition in subsection (2) is met.

“Those conditions are: (a) it is before 15 June 2020; (b) an agreement on the future trade relationship has been concluded; (c) the House of Commons has passed a motion in the form set out in subsection (3) and the House of Lords has considered a motion to take note of the Government's intention not to request an extension.”

Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn at state opening (Reuters) 

Adam Forrest3 January 2020 08:14
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Cummings posts weirdo job ad looking for ‘weirdos’

Boris Johnson’s adviser Dominic Cummings has urged “weirdos and misfits” to apply for jobs in No 10 ahead of a planned shake-up of the civil service.

The much-mocked job ad on his blog, he said wanted people who had “fought their way out of an appalling hell hole”.

“Frankly it will hard having a boy/girlfriend at all,” he added. “It will be exhausting but interesting, and if you cut it you will be involved in things at the age of 21 that most people never see.

“I want people who are much brighter than me who can work in an extreme environment.”

In another section aimed at “super-talented weirdos”, he wrote: “We need some true wild cards, artists, people who never went to university and fought their way out of an appalling hell hole”.

And after asking applicants to send their CV by email, he warned “I’ll bin you within weeks if you don’t fit – don’t complain later because I made it clear now.”

Adam Forrest3 January 2020 08:19
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Cummings’ plan for Whitehall shake-up ‘dangerous’, says union leader

The general secretary of the First Division Association trade union has said the PM’s aide Dominic Cummings’ call for radical changes in the civil service “worrying”.

Dave Penman told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “But it’s quite an unusual approach and I think what’s more worrying rather than the kind of dynamics of his blog and some of the language in it, is the kind of approach being taken by government, or certainly being signalled by government about what it thinks of the capability of the civil service just now and what needs to change.”

Pushed on whether it is right for a political figure such as Cummings to lead changes, Penman added: “The civil service is recruited on merit, it’s a really fundamental principle. You are employed in the civil service because of what you can do, not what you believe.”

He continued: “If you surround yourself with people who are recruited simply because they believe the same as you believe, and whose employment is at your behest, is that the best way for the civil service or advisers to speak truth unto power? I don't think it is, and I think some of those approaches are quite dangerous as well.”

Adam Forrest3 January 2020 08:28
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Francois leads legal bid to make sure Big Ben bongs for Brexit

A group of Tory Eurosceptics, led by ERG deputy chairman Mark Francois, have now tabled an amendment to the government’s withdrawal bill to make sure Big Ben chimes on 31 January to mark our exit from the EU.

Francois has previously said it would be “inconceivable to me and my colleagues that Big Ben would not form part of a national celebration to leave the EU”.

Although a commission led by his predecessor John Bercow blocked any “celebratory” bongs ahead of the UK’s previous scheduled departure from the EU on 29 March, Sir Lindsay Hoyle said recently he was “not going to stand in the way” if MPs choose to mark the expected exit.

ERG deputy chair Mark Francois (Reuters) 

Adam Forrest3 January 2020 08:34
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Jess Phillips could ‘reach out to ordinary people,’ says Labour backer

Melanie Onn, the former Labour MP for Great Grimsby, has said Jess Phillips would be in a "very good position to be able to reach out to ordinary people” if she were to stand for the Labour leadership.

Onn, who lost her seat in the December election, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I’m really looking for somebody who is going to be honest, I’m looking for somebody with a USP that is going to transcend normal politics, I’m looking for somebody who is going to be unafraid to share their views and opinions and be prepared to back those up with very strong committed arguments.

“And I think that at the moment, while we’ve got Boris Johnson as prime minister, we need somebody with an incredibly strong personality who’s not going to be afraid to stand up to him and is going to scrutinise him in a way that he does not appreciate.

“And I think that, were Jess to formally declare, that she would be in a very good position to be able to reach out to ordinary people around the country, speak their language and make people feel like she understands what it is that they’re saying.”

Labour MP and possible leadership contender Jess Phillips (Reuters) 

Adam Forrest3 January 2020 08:46
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Former civil service chief warns Cummings against ‘war’ with Whitehall

The former head of the civil service Lord Kerslake has warned Dominic Cummings that the service cannot be changed overnight.

Lord Kerslake told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “We need to wait to see the detail of this. But what I would say is of course the civil service should be open to challenge, to improvement and change – that’s part and parcel of how it stays a good civil service.

“What I would guard against is getting into a war with the civil service where they get given the blame if you like for anything that doesn’t quite go right – it works a lot better if you deliver change with the grain of the civil service.”

Lord Kerslake said: “My point would be government’s come in at this situation and the biggest risk for them is hubris – they think because they’ve won an election they can do everything and change everything overnight and it isn’t like that. If they don’t want to hear that then so be it.

“But there’s plenty of evidence that change is possible in the civil service, it was achieved when I was there, it has been achieved since, but you have to work with the civil service and try to carry them with the process of change.”

He added: “There’s a balancing act here between getting things done and also making changes to the way the civil service works and that’s something they’re going to have to work through, and I would advise them to work it through in some detail.”

PM's chief aide Dominic Cummings (Reuters) 

Adam Forrest3 January 2020 08:57
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Former Middle East minister warns of ‘huge potential escalation’ with Iran after US airstrike

Alistair Burt has said the US launching an airstrike which killed Iran’s most powerful military commander General Qasem Soleimani could cause “a huge potential escalation” of the conflict, of which “the consequences are unknown”.

The former Middle East minister told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that it is “very important now to concentrate on what happens next, and for everybody involved diplomatically to do everything they can to try and diffuse the situation”. He added: “It’s extremely serious.”

Asked whether the UK government would have been told about the US government’s airstrike plans before they happened, Burt added: “I doubt it.”

Burt added that the risks and consequences facing UK military personnel based in the Middle East “are much greater this morning than they were before”.

Asked whether this airstrike was an unwise move by the US, Burt said it “takes the confrontation between the United States and Iran to a completely different level”.

“It’s very hard to see what the consequences will be. I’m quite sure the United States will have to come out with more justification for its actions – what has caused this.

“But I think everyone has got to have extremely cool heads this morning. This is a very grave escalation in the affairs of the region, the consequences are unknowable and I think words and comments have got to be extremely carefully handled today.”

Adam Forrest3 January 2020 09:11
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Tom Watson hasn’t made up his mind on Labour leadership contenders

Former deputy Labour leader Tom Watson has said it it’s “too early in the race” to decide who is best placed to lead the party of the “mess”.

“I honestly haven’t made up my mind who I’m going to vote for yet,” he told BBC Breakfast. “Partly that’s because I want to see leadership from the candidates. I want them to explain to the Labour party why it lost (and) really very deeply and very honestly explain what they think went wrong.

“Remember we’ve, in the last 11 general elections, Labour have only won three of them – all of those under Tony Blair.”

Adam Forrest3 January 2020 09:23
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Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s husband worried for imprisoned wife after US air strike

The husband of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a dual British-Iranian citizen detained in Iran has expressed concern for her safety and that of her family after a US air strike killed Iran’s top general.

Zaghari-Ratcliffe has been imprisoned in Tehran since 2016 when she was arrested and accused of spying while visiting family.

Her husband Richard, who has spent the last four years campaigning for her release, told ITV’s Good Morning Britain: “Things are getting much worse again between the US and Iran, but also between all of us and Iran.”

He added: “I sit here partly worried for what that means for Nazanin, partly worried what that means for my in-laws, sat in their ordinary living room in Tehran where they’re all really worried.”

Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe (PA) 

Adam Forrest3 January 2020 10:00

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