Softening up?
In comments that came as something of a bolt from the blue, Brexit Secretary David Davis admitted this week that the UK could pay for continued access to the Single Market even after leaving the European Union.
Mr Davis contextualised his thoughts as an effort to prevent a labour or skills shortage. The suggestion was welcomed by Cabinet colleagues โ Philip Hammond said it was sensible to consider the possibility โ without being confirmed by Downing Street. Yet, while a surprising omission from an arch-Eurosceptic like Mr Davis, the proposals/suggestion demonstrates the importance of the EU market to Britain, and the difficulties that trade barriers post-Brexit could cause. Faced with the potential a loss of trade, labour and skills, the Government is potentially considering a softer negotiating stance โ taking the view that an annual fee for Single Market access could be a price worth paying.
Whether the idea is able to win universal support across the Cabinet, however, remains to be seen.
Coming in droves
The Office of National Statistics published new figures for immigration to the UK this week โ concluding the numbers of people coming to Britain has hit a record high.
The ONS found that 650,000 people moved to the UK in the year to June โ up 11,000 on last year and meaning the net migration figure (also accounting for emigration levels) is 335,000. In what will have been uncomfortable reading for ministers, thatโs more than three times the official target.
The figures show a pre-referendum surge of people seeking to move to the UK, while the impact of the referendum result wonโt be truly known until figures for the second half of the year are published in a few monthsโ time. Nevertheless, the ONS findings leave the Governmentโs net migration target in tatters, and could influence the Prime Ministerโs approach to Brexit negotiations โ notably over the free movement of people, which sheโs intimated could be a red line.
Let them eat cake?
The Government had to quickly distance itself from suggestions over its Brexit negotiating position this week, after an aide to Mark Field was photographed leaving a meeting with clearly readable notes on possible terms of a deal with the EU and individual Member States.
The note suggested the French would be โthe most difficultโ during the negotiations, while it would be โrelatively straightforwardโ to achieve a deal on manufacturing but harder to reach an agreement on services. Most notably, the handwritten minutes suggested UK access to the Single Market was โunlikelyโ, but that the negotiating positon should be โhave your cake and eat itโ.
Business Secretary Greg Clark insisted he did not recognise the notes as having any bearing on a British negotiating position, but the suggestions prompted further conjecture of a โhardโ Brexit โ while inadvertently validating the Prime Ministerโs penchant for secrecy over the UKโs plans.
Deal or no deal
Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond has rejected any possibility of a separate Brexit deal for Scotland, insisting First Minister Nicola Sturgeon is โgrasping at strawsโ.
Speaking during a trip to Edinburgh, the Chancellor ruled out any special arrangements for Scotland on training and immigration, arguing Scotland would be disadvantaged by having different rules to the rest of the UK. Mrs Sturgeon has been busy visiting European capitals in recent weeks, in an effort to win support for a separate deal for Scotland, which voted to remain in the European Union.
While Mr Hammond insisted a UK deal would be reached โwith Scottish Government inputโ, the episode underlines tensions between Westminster and the devolved institutions. Meanwhile, a YouGov poll for The Times this week found that only 22 percent of respondents thought a special deal was achievable and split opinion over Mrs Sturgeonโs efforts (42 percent in favour 41 percent opposed).
Weโre back!
In a stunning electoral upset, the Liberal Democrats overturned a 23,000 majority to depose Zac Goldsmith and take the seat of Richmond Park in a by-election. The ballot was called by Goldsmith, who resigned from the Conservative Party and ran as an independent, after the Government indicated a preference for a third runway at Heathrow.
Newly elected MP Sarah Olney was quick to claim the vote as a victory for those opposed to a โhardโ Brexit, with Tim Farron claiming the win marked a resurrection of the Lib Dems.
European Parliament chief negotiator Guy Vehofstadt was also quick to congratulate Mrs Olney on her victory, prompting fury amongst Leave campaigners such as Iain Duncan Smith.