Boris Johnson sets out 'Super Canada' Brexit blueprint
British former foreign secretary Boris Johnson yesterday unveiled his vision for Brexit, urging Prime Minister Theresa May to "chuck" her so-called Chequers plan for a "Super Canada" trade deal.
The ardent Brexiteer, who resigned from the government in July over the issue, described her current proposals for Britain's future relationship with the EU as a "moral and intellectual humiliation".
Writing in the Daily Telegraph, Johnson outlined a six-point alternative plan, that would scrap a backstop agreement struck with the European Union last December over the contentious Irish border.
He argued that adopting technology and making customs checks away from the frontier would prevent a return to a hard border -- a sticking point in negotiations and a key factor in May's proposal.
Johnson called for Britain and the EU to negotiate a free trade agreement -- dubbed "Super Canada" -- mirroring the deal the bloc signed with Ottawa in 2016.
It removed the vast majority of customs duties on exports crossing the Atlantic.
He conceded that negotiating such an agreement, which would aim for mutual recognition of standards to keep goods moving and also include services, may require extending any Brexit transition period beyond 2020.
"This is the moment to change the course of the negotiations and (to) do justice to the ambitions and potential of Brexit," Johnson wrote in the 4,500-word article.
"We have the chance to get it right, and I am afraid that future generations will not lightly forgive us if we fail."
His intervention, on the eve of the Conservative Party conference -- where he will address a fringe event on Tuesday -- is set to increase pressure on embattled leader May.
She has proposed Britain follow EU rules in trade in goods after Brexit, to protect manufacturing supply lines and avoid the hard border between Northern Ireland, a British province, and EU member Ireland.
The plan, forged in July at May's country retreat Chequers, has faced strong opposition in her Conservative party and criticism in Brussels, but May has repeatedly vowed to stick with it.
Johnson reiterated yesterday the proposal was a "democratic disaster" that would "cheat the electorate" and leave Britain "half in, half out" of Europe.
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