Shropshire MP Owen Paterson backs Boris at Tory conference
North Shropshire MP Owen Paterson says Boris Johnson is ready to take on Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn over the future of Britain.
Mr Paterson said the former foreign secretary's speech at the Tory Party Conference yesterday was everything that the mainstream of Conservative politics wanted.
"From the merits of free markets and extending international contracts to private house owning, I agreed with everything he said, as did the rest of the audience," he said.
"As he finished the hall errupted with spontaneous applause.
"It was great to see someone being optimistic, someone ready to take on Corbyn."
The Shropshire MP would not been drawn over whether it had been a prime minister in waiting speech that Boris Johnson had made but said: The Prime Minster has to see that we cannot accept the Chequers deal on Brexit, it a completely ghastly mess."
During a speech made by Mr Paterson on Monday the former environment and Northern Ireland secretary pledge to vote against the Tory whip if the deal was not altered.
Mr Johnson, who resigned as foreign secretary earlier this year in protest at the Prime Minister's Chequers plan to leave the EU, used a speech at a Conservative Party Confernce fringe event to describe the proposal as an "outrage".
Writing on Twitter North Shropshire MP, Owen Paterson, decribed how Mr Johnson's speech was greeted by a standing ovation.
He said: "The audience erupted in another standing ovation after Boris Johnson’s positive speech: Clear restatement of Conservative principles, the benefits of free markets and why we must #ChuckChequers to take back control and deliver the Conservatives manifesto pledge."
Mr Johnson told his audience how the Chequers plan would leave the UK "locked in the tractor beam of Brussels".
The former foreign secretary warned that the only winners from a Chequers-style Brexit would be the far-right and far-left in British politics.
And he urged Tory delegates to persuade the Prime Minister to "chuck Chequers" and return to the hard Brexit blueprint she first set out in her Lancaster House speech, when she said she would take the UK out of the customs union, single market and jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice.
Speaking on the fringe of the conference, the former London mayor won an enthusiastic reaction on a scale not seen so far inside the main hall.
Mr Johnson even won loud applause when he suggested that the PM risked being prosecuted under a 14th century law saying that "no foreign court or government shall have jurisdiction in this country".
'Disastrous'
He rejected as "total fantasy" the idea that it would be possible to "bodge" Brexit now and then negotiate a better deal after leaving in March 2019.
And he warned that if a deal based on Chequers was agreed with the EU, it would "embolden" those calling for a second referendum – something he said would be "disastrous for trust in politics".
"This is not pragmatic, it is not a compromise. It is dangerous and unstable - politically and economically," he said.
"My fellow Conservatives, this is not democracy. This is not what we voted for. This is an outrage.
"This is not taking back control: this is forfeiting control."
And he warned: "If we get it wrong – if we bottle Brexit now – believe me, the people of this country will find it hard to forgive.
He was loudly clapped and cheered as he said: "For one last time, I urge our friends in Government to deliver what the people voted for, to back Theresa May in the best way possible - by softly, quietly, and sensibly backing her original plan.
"And in so doing to believe in conservatism and to believe in Britain.
"Because if we get it wrong we will be punished. And if we get it right we can have a glorious future.
"This Government will then be remembered for having done something brave and right and remarkable and in accordance with the wishes of the people."
A Lancaster House-style Brexit would be a "win-win" for both Britain and the EU, Mr Johnson said.
But he warned: "If we cheat the electorate – and Chequers is a cheat – we will escalate the sense of mistrust.
"We will give credence to those who cry betrayal, and I am afraid we will make it more likely that the ultimate beneficiary of the Chequers deal will be the far-right in the form of Ukip, and therefore the far-left in the form of Jeremy Corbyn."