Parliament’s failure to agree on Brexit is holding back investment, Business Secretary Greg Clark said after Nissan Motor Co. abandoned plans to expand production in the U.K.
Clark said while the company’s decision to produce its X-Trail model in Japan instead of Sunderland, northeast England, was “made on broader business grounds,” there’s “damaging uncertainty” about the terms of Britain’s departure from the European Union.
Across the industry “there are investments poised to be made if we can settle this question of the terms of our exit and future relationship,” Clark said, before warning that a no-deal divorce from the EU would be “ruinous for our prospects.”
Prime Minister Theresa May will start a two-day visit to Northern Ireland on Tuesday as she seeks support for her divorce deal with the EU. The embattled premier has until next week to secure changes that will satisfy anti-EU members of her Conservative Party and win her a majority in Parliament.
To do so she is trying to reopen talks with Brussels on the deal she spent 18 months negotiating before Parliament rejected it by a record margin last month.
No Assurances
Martin Selmayr, secretary-general of the EU Commission, denied reports on Monday that the bloc might offer legally binding assurances on the Irish border backstop to help May get her deal through the House of Commons.
“On the EU side, nobody is considering this,” Selmayr wrote on Twitter after meeting with members of the House of Commons Brexit Committee in Brussels. “The EU did well to start its no deal preparations in December 2017.”
For their part, Brexiteer members of the committee were angry that May doesn’t appear to have asked the EU to abandon its insistence on the backstop arrangement to keep the Irish frontier open after Brexit.
“I asked Martin Selmayr whether the PM had ever asked for the backstop to be removed,” Tory Andrea Jenkyns said on Twitter. “He stated that he wasn’t aware of her asking for this and had certainly not asked him. He also stated that there has been no request to reopen negotiations by the British Government.”
John Whittingdale, a Tory former cabinet minister, was similarly pessimistic. “I certainly didn’t hear anything that gave me great hope that the prime minister would come back with a change to the withdrawal agreement,” he told the BBC.
‘Our Commitments’
May, whose minority administration in Westminster is propped up by 10 MPs from Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party, will pledge during her visit to the province to “find a way” to keep the border open.
“We will find a way to deliver a Brexit that honors our commitments to Northern Ireland, commands broad support across the community in Northern Ireland and secures a majority in the Westminster Parliament,” May will say, according to extracts of a speech released by her office.
Transport Secretary Chris Grayling, who said the Nissan decision had more to do with the market for diesel vehicles than Brexit, called on the EU to compromise and said the March 29 deadline for leaving the bloc will not be delayed.
“We want to work with the EU to reach a deal, but if they are not prepared to do that they will have to take responsibility that we are heading towards a no-deal exit,” Grayling said in an interview with the Daily Telegraph. “I’ve been in every cabinet meeting, and there’s been no conversation about delaying post-March 29. We are not delaying Article 50.”