Theresa May will today declare that her Brexit deal delivers on the key priority of controlling immigration, as she faces down Cabinet critics who want to reopen negotiations.
The cricket-loving Prime Minister will try to get on the front foot in the Tory Brexit war by saying her agreement will create greater opportunities for young people wanting skilled jobs.
But she will risk a fresh Cabinet row by rejecting a demand from her Eurosceptic ministers to make last-minute changes to the Withdrawal Agreement.
The PM (pictured on Sky this morning) confirmed she is set to fly back for more negotiations with the EU this week as she stressed her under-fire Brexit plan is not fully finished. She added that the next seven days ‘are going to be critical’
A ‘Gang of Five’ ministers, led by Michael Gove and Andrea Leadsom, have been calling for modifications to the Northern Ireland backstop. But Mrs May will today say the arrangements have already been ‘agreed in full’ as she insists her deal is a ‘good one for the UK’.
Addressing the CBI annual conference in London, the Prime Minister will say that the priority in this ‘intense week of negotiations’ is to ‘hammer out’ the framework of the future trade deal.
Mrs May will go on the offensive with a sales pitch highlighting how she is bringing back control over immigration.
She will tell delegates that her agreement will create a level playing field on immigration that means EU nationals will no longer be able to ‘jump the queue’.
The European Research Group - which is led by Jacob Rees-Mogg (pictured at a hastily arranged press conference outside Parliament last week where he announced he had no confidence in the PM) - tried to turn the screw on Mrs May by released in a report savaging the PM's divorce package and demanding a radical change in policy
She will say: ‘Getting back full control of our borders is an issue of great importance to the British people... once we have left the EU, we will be fully in control of who comes here.
‘It will no longer be the case that EU nationals, regardless of the skills or experience they have to offer, can jump the queue ahead of engineers from Sydney or software developers from Delhi.
‘Instead of a system based on where a person is from, we will have one that is built around the talents and skills a person has to offer.
‘Not only will this deliver on the verdict of the referendum, it should lead to greater opportunity for young people in this country to access training and skilled employment.’
A group of five Eurosceptic Cabinet ministers – Commons leader Mrs Leadsom, environment secretary Mr Gove and three others had been expected to gather this morning for breakfast to discuss how to push for changes to Mrs May’s Brexit deal
The Eurosceptic group had included Liam Fox, above, Britain's Secretary for International Trade. ‘Gang of Five’ ministers, led by Michael Gove and Andrea Leadsom, have been calling for modifications to the Northern Ireland backstop
The group had also included International Development Secretary Penny Mordaunt, transport secretary Chris Grayling. But But Mrs May will today say the arrangements have already been ‘agreed in full’ as she insists her deal is a ‘good one for the UK'
Mrs May yesterday took a swipe at Tory rivals threatening to unseat her as party leader, warning that she was not ‘going to be distracted’ from the ‘important job of making sure we do get that good final deal for this country’.
She argued that a change of leadership would not make it easier to get a deal past Parliament, but would instead create economic instability and put jobs at risk.
In a message to those plotting her downfall, including members of the European Research Group of Eurosceptic MPs led by Jacob Rees-Mogg, she said she had not considered quitting.
She told Sophy Ridge on Sunday: ‘A change of leadership at this point isn’t going to make the negotiations any easier and it isn’t going to change the parliamentary arithmetic.
'What it will do is bring in a degree of uncertainty. That is uncertainty for people and their jobs.
‘What it will do is mean that it is a risk that we delay the negotiations and that is a risk that Brexit gets delayed or frustrated.’
Asked if she had considered stepping down, Mrs May said: ‘No, I haven’t. Of course it has been a tough week – actually these negotiations have been tough right from the start – but they were always going to get even more difficult right toward the end when we are coming to that conclusion.’
She added that the next seven days ‘are going to be critical’, and said she would be travelling back to Brussels to talk with key figures – including European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker – ahead of an emergency European Council summit on Sunday.
The Prime Minister (pictured in her Downing Street office) is determined to stay the course despite heavy criticism this week
A group of five Eurosceptic Cabinet ministers – Commons leader Mrs Leadsom, environment secretary Mr Gove, international development secretary Penny Mordaunt, transport secretary Chris Grayling and international trade secretary Liam Fox – had been expected to gather this morning for breakfast to discuss how to push for changes to Mrs May’s Brexit deal.
However, last night it was not clear whether the meeting would go ahead.
Karen Bradley, one of Mrs May’s closest Cabinet allies, yesterday said the country faced a choice between what she termed ‘the only workable deal that fulfils the will of the referendum’, or ‘back to square one on Brexit’.
Almost half of Britain's voters want Theresa May (pictured last week) to stay on as Prime Minister and see through Brexit, it has been revealed
The Northern Ireland secretary added: ‘Clearly, this is a deal that has involved some difficult choices at times, and an element of compromise.
‘That is an unavoidable fact of negotiations and I accept not everybody is going to agree with every point of detail or choice that we have made.
‘But it is fundamentally a deal which is in the national interest. It is a deal that will protect jobs, our national security and the integrity of our precious United Kingdom.’
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News Pictures Prime Minister will insist her Brexit deal delivers on immigration promises
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