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EATING THEIR WORDS

Government’s Brexit strategy not to ‘have its cake and eat it’ argues Cabinet minister after embarrassing leaked memo

Business Secretary Greg Clark said he did not 'recognise' the contents of the note caught on camera in Downing Street

THE Government’s Brexit strategy is not to have its cake and eat it argued a Cabinet minister after an embarrassing leaked memo.

Business Secretary Greg Clark said he did not "recognise" the contents of the note, which was caught on camera in the hands of an aide in Downing Street.

 The Business Secretary said he did not recognise the contents of the memo
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The Business Secretary said he did not recognise the contents of the memoCredit: Reuters

Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, he continued: "I was interested and amused to see it because it doesn't reflect any of the conversations that I've been part of in Downing Street.

"I don't know what the provenance of that note is. All I can say is this is going to be a negotiation that has to be serious. We have to get our negotiating mandate in place but this is being done soberly and meticulously."

Asked if the Government's policy was "have your cake and eat it” as the memo suggested, he replied: "It would be nice to have but it's not the policy."

 Greg Clark said the Government's position was not to have its cake and eat it on Brexit
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Greg Clark said the Government's position was not to have its cake and eat it on BrexitCredit: Barcroft Media

It comes after Number 10 was forced to play down suggestions Britain will be unable to remain in the single market after it leaves the EU, after the memorandum suggested it was "unlikely".

The document was carried by a senior Tory aide to Conservative Party vice-chairman Mark Field as they emerged from a meeting with the Department for Exiting the EU.

A Government spokesman said: "These individual notes do not belong to a Government official or a special adviser.

“They do not reflect the Government's position in relation to Brexit negotiations."

However Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron said the memo appeared to reflect a Government in disarray over the forthcoming negotiating process.

 The document was snapped as an aide was leaving a meeting in Downing Street
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The document was snapped as an aide was leaving a meeting in Downing StreetCredit: Barcroft Media

"If this is a strategy it is incoherent. We can't have our cake and eat it and there is no certainty on the single market," he said.

“This picture shows the Government doesn't have a plan or even a clue.”

And Keir Starmer, Shadow Minister for Leaving the European Union, said: “The case for Government to come clean, to end this unnecessary uncertainty and publish a clear plan for Brexit is now overwhelming.

 The minister refuted the details of the document - which suggested the UK would not stay in the single market
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The minister refuted the details of the document - which suggested the UK would not stay in the single marketCredit: Getty Images

“Two weeks ago Boris Johnson told a Czech newspaper that the Government is not planning for the UK to stay in the Customs Union, yesterday we learn from leaked notes that the Government does not intend to stay in the single market either.”

The Labour MP added: “These disclosures are significant because they suggest that the Government is not even going to fight for the single market or customs union in the negotiations.

“If that is the case, there are huge implications for the economy, for businesses and for jobs in the UK.”


Get a folder! A history of leaked documents caught on camera

The note was carried by Mr Field's chief of staff Julia Dockerill, who is the latest in a growing list of visitors to Downing Street to be embarrassed after documents were picked up by the cameras –here are some other examples:

  • 2008 - Housing Minister Caroline Flint carelessly exposed a sheet of typed notes about the housing crisis as she entered Number 10 for a weekly Cabinet session.
  • 2009 - Met Assistant Commissioner Bob Quick walked into Downing Street with top-secret documents of a major anti-terror operation in north-west England. The blunder meant a police operation to arrest the suspects had to be brought forward.
  • 2010 - Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander was pictured with a copy of the Government's spending review document, revealing a potential 490,000 public sector job losses.
  • 2011 - Then International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell was pictured outside Number 10 with briefing papers containing sensitive information about Afghanistan.
  • 2016 - A document signed by the Department for Education's most senior civil servant was photographed being carried into No 10 revealing that Education Secretary Justine Greening planned to launch a consultation into opening new grammar schools.
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