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by Matt Honeycombe-Foster
06 June 2019
Dominic Raab suggests he would shut down Parliament to secure Brexit

Dominic Raab - PA

Dominic Raab suggests he would shut down Parliament to secure Brexit

Conservative leadership hopeful Dominic Raab has been branded "undemocratic" after he refused to rule out shutting down Parliament to ensure Brexit happens.

The former Brexit Secretary told a behind-closed-doors hustings organised by the One Nation group of moderate Tory MP that he would be prepared to temporarily "prorogue" the Commons to guarantee the UK leaves the European Union by 31 October.

A source close to Raab told Holyrood's sister site PoliticsHome: “His point is that if Parliament won’t rule out what options they will use then why would the executive rule out options?"

The suggestion sparked an angry backlash from fellow leadership contender Rory Stewart.

The International Development Secretary told ITV's Peston programme: "All this talk about no-deal Brexit is a recipe for delay. It can’t be done.

"And the reason why Dom Raab is saying he is going to prorogue Parliament, in other words try to shut the doors on Parliament, is because the only way that they could try to get it through is by doing that.

"That would be illegal, if they did it for the express purpose of getting it through. It would be unconstitutional. It would be undemocratic. And it wouldn’t work."

Meanwhile Cabinet minister Amber Rudd told reporters outside the meeting that it was "outrageous to consider proroguing Parliament".

"We are not Stuart kings," the Work and Pensions Secretary said.

Raab told Tory MPs that his time as Brexit Secretary meant he knew "the strengths but also the weaknesses" of EU leaders.

"That's why we don't just need a conviction Brexiteer," he added. "We need someone who is resolute, but someone who can navigate the rocky path ahead and get Brexit delivered."

Meanwhile Jeremy Hunt, the Foreign Secretary, said he was the best person to "negotiate a new approach" to Brexit.

And he warned against taking a "hardline" stance with the EU in a bid to win changes to the agreement thrashed out by Theresa May.

"I'm an entrepreneur who has been doing deals all my life," he said. "I negotiated the new BBC licence fee and the new doctors' contract. I won't pretend this will be easy.

"I met [French president Emmanuel] Macron and [German chancellor] Merkel today in Portsmouth and a hardline approach will lead to a hardline response. They will wait for parliament to block no deal."

He also warned the Tories would be "destroyed" by the Brexit Party if they fail to take the UK out of the EU.

Environment Secretary Michael Gove told the hustings that he would be willing to delay Brexit "for a few weeks" beyond 31 October if he believed a deal was in sight, but supporters later admitted it could actually be several months.

Health secretary Matt Hancock also sparked a row by comparing Jeremy Corbyn to Hitler. He claimed the Labour leader would be “the first anti-semitic leader of a Western nation since the Second World War” if he wins the next election.

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