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As it happenedended1582897613

Boris Johnson news - live: France rejects UK’s ‘artificial’ Brexit deadline, as PM mocked over emergency coronavirus meeting in three days' time

Follow all the latest developments

Adam Forrest
Friday 28 February 2020 14:45 GMT
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Brexit briefing: How long until the end of the transition period?

Boris Johnson’s plan to walk away from talks with the EU by the end of June unless there is a “broad outline” of a Canada-style free trade deal has been met with dismay in Brussels. EU diplomats reportedly believe a “dramatic crisis” lies ahead this summer.

France’s Europe minister Amelie de Montchalin said the bloc would refuse to accept “artificial deadlines” in trade talks. “We do not accept time pressure,” Montchalin told an audience at Chatham House in London on Friday.

Mr Johnson will convene the government’s Cobra committee in response to a growing number of cases of the coronavirus – but has been ridiculed for scheduling an “emergency” meeting for Monday.

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Good morning and welcome to The Independent’s live coverage of events at Westminster and beyond.

Adam Forrest28 February 2020 08:27
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EU diplomats predict summer ‘drama’ over trade talks

Plenty of criticism mounting after Boris Johnson’s government threatened to pull out of trade talks with the EU by the end of June unless there is a “broad outline” of a Canada-style deal. Ministers will then start preparing us all for a no-deal crash out onto World Trade Organisation (WTO) terms at the end of 2020.

EU sources told The Times there would be a “dramatic crisis” over the summer.

One unnamed European ambassador said “there will be a lot of drama” around June, but suggested the possibility of an agreement would rumble on into the autumn.

Mujtaba Rahman, the respected analyst at the Eurasia Group, said “the mood among senior EU officials regarding Monday’s start of UK trade talks is extremely gloomy”.

He added: “Expectations have adjusted that EU might end up trading with UK like US or China, on WTO terms.”

EU’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier said only: “We will stick to all our prior commitments in the Political Declaration. We want an ambitious & fair partnership with the UK in the future.”

Adam Forrest28 February 2020 08:40
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Government treatment of EU nationals ‘unacceptable’, says Labour

Campaigners have accused the Home Office of being “less than co-operative” in helping vulnerable people apply to the EU Settlement Scheme.

It comes as the watchdog reviewing the government’s handling of the project described some of its responses to concerns as “less positive and constructive” than hoped.

David Bolt, the Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration, said: “Given the Home Office’s considerable efforts to date to make the (scheme) a success, I imagined that I would be pushing at an open door.

“Some of the responses are less positive and constructive than I had hoped.”

Maike Bohn, co-founder of the3million, claimed some people were “struggling to apply” or still do not know about the scheme and could miss out. The group Migrant Voice criticised “a lack of transparency and detail in the Home Office data”.

Bell Ribeiro-Addy, Labour’s shadow immigration minister, said: “It is unacceptable that government departments have been less than co-operative when the status of millions of EU citizens is at issue.”

The watchdog report highlighted costs which could be incurred through phone operator charges when calling the scheme's helpline and charges imposed by some councils for ID document scanning services.

The department insisted it is free to apply to the scheme and it had not imposed charges but conceded on occasion some applicants may incur costs. It said help and information was available by a variety of means, suggesting the costs could be avoided.

Adam Forrest28 February 2020 08:46
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Senior Tory warns PM over ‘ill-judged’ language

Caroline Nokes has criticised Boris Johnson for using “really ill-judged” language about women and ethnic minorities.

The former minister – new chair of the Women and Equalities Committee – claimed some of the prime minister’s previous language had been “unfortunate”, as she singled out his widely condemned comparison of women wearing niqabs to “letter boxes”.

In an interview with The House, Nokes also compared parliament to a “boys’ prep school ... where the inmates haven’t quite got to 13”.

Adam Forrest28 February 2020 09:00
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Labour leadership rivals clash over antisemitism

Frontrunner Sir Keir Starmer accused his left-wing rival Rebecca Long-Bailey of failing to speak out on the issue in shadow cabinet during last night’s Sky News debate.

Sir Keir claimed “Rebecca didn’t speak out in the same way as I did, in my view” – before adding that it “wasn’t right” to “try to score points now off each other”.

But the attempt to score points continued. Lisa Nandy said the other two faced a “serious question of judgement” on the issue. “We’ve given a green light to antisemites everywhere,” she added – before addressing Starmer.

“If we do not acknowledge how badly the shadow cabinet as a whole got this wrong, we will not earn the trust of the Jewish community.”

Starmer retorted: “Lisa, you were in the shadow cabinet when this issue came up as well.”

All three candidates dodged the question of who will get their second-preference vote in the ballot.

Adam Forrest28 February 2020 09:20
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Universal Credit has increased mental health problems, report finds

The roll-out of the new combined benefit has led to an increase in mental health problems among unemployed claimants, and could have “major implications for the nation’s health”, a new study has found.

Universal Credit has led to a 6.6 per cent increase in psychological distress among its recipients - equivalent to approximately 63,674 people feeling an impact, according to figures published in journal The Lancet.

The data suggests that more than 21,000 of these people may have become clinically depressed.

Professor Dame Margaret Whitehead, co-author of the report, called on the government to make changes to the system.

The University of Liverpool academic said: “Given the mounting evidence of substantial mental health harms related to Universal Credit, it is crucial that the government conducts a robust health impacts assessment of all welfare reforms.

“With nearly two thirds of households in the UK receiving some kind of welfare benefit, any changes to the welfare system - even those with small individual effects - could have major implications for the nation’s health.”

Adam Forrest28 February 2020 09:35
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‘Authoritarian measures’ won’t be necessary to contain coronavirus, says Jeremy Hunt

The chairman of the Commons Health Committee and Tory former health secretary said people need to consider the social and economic trade offs they are prepared to make to try and contain the speared of the coronavirus.

Referring to the situation in China, Jeremy Hunt told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “In Wuhan, it appears that it has peaked at less than 5 per cent of the population getting it.

“And we are having to make contingency plans for 70 per cent of the population getting it, and in terms of the number of lives lost, there is a massive difference, hundreds of thousands of lives difference, if you can contain it to less than 5 per cent.

"And, so, the question we have to ask ourselves, and I think the government is right to start to spell this out - but I think they need to go further - is what are the social and economic trade-offs that we are prepared to make to keep the spread of the virus at that low level.

“We are starting to hear some of the things that the government is considering.

“We are a mature democracy and I think it is perfectly possible to count on the co-operation of the public to comply with guidelines and recommendations made by the government without the kind of authoritarian measures that we have seen on our TV screens.”

Adam Forrest28 February 2020 09:43
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PM needs to go on ‘war footing’ over coronavirus, says George Osborne

The former chancellor has offered some implied criticism of the government’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak.

“The British Government now needs to go onto a ‘war footing’ with the coronavirus: daily NHS press briefings, regular COBRA meetings chaired by the PM, Ministers on all major media show,” Osborne tweeted.

“The public is fearful, wants information and needs to know their leaders have got a grip.”

Adam Forrest28 February 2020 10:01
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IDS’ universal credit legacy ‘disastrous’, says Alastair Campbell

Tony Blair’s former communications supremo has had a pop at the former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith. He urged people to ask the former work and pensions secretary about “the massive rise in mental health problems reported in the Lancet today as a result of his disastrous Universal Credit policy”.

It follows an interview with The Sun in which IDS claimed: “The EU is going to become the sick man of the world... We have the whip hand in these negotiations.”

Adam Forrest28 February 2020 10:35
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Trident weapons system ‘obvious’ success, says defence minister

Defence minister Baroness Annabel Goldie has said she would be “utterly astonished” if the government’s review of defence policies recommends scrapping Trident.

Boris Johnson has announced a post-Brexit review of the UK’s foreign policy and defence capabilities to set the country's national security strategy.

Baroness Goldie told BBC Radio Scotland’s Good Morning Scotland programme: “The review will have to take place and come to its conclusions but I would be utterly astonished if there was any suggestion that we should reconsider that.

“The success of the deterrent is obvious. It is an essential part of our global alliances not least in Nato, where remember we are not just the biggest defence spender in Europe, we are the second-biggest defence spender in Nato.

“That deterrent is an important component of stability throughout the global territory.”

The SNP has repeatedly called for the weapons system – based on the Clyde – to be scrapped, with first minister Nicola Sturgeon describing it as “immoral” and “a massive waste of money”.

But Nato general secretary Jens Stoltenberg said Britain’s Trident system is “important” to the organisation.

Baroness Goldie (PA)

Adam Forrest28 February 2020 11:01

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