Tories urge Boris to ‘more aggressively’ use Brexit freedoms to turn UK into world-beater

David Davis on what ‘triggered’ Frost’s resignation

We use your sign-up to provide content in ways you’ve consented to and to improve our understanding of you. This may include adverts from us and 3rd parties based on our understanding. You can unsubscribe at any time. More info

Lord David Frost stunned Westminster in December when he quit as chief Brexit negotiator, but his predecessor David Davis has revealed the real reason behind the move. Speaking to LBC’s Camilla Tominey, Mr Davis complained that Britons had not seen enough benefits from Brexit yet. He urged Boris Johnson to “get more aggressive” and take advantage of the deregulation that Brexit offers.

Camilla Tominey asked: “What do you think about the fact we don’t seem to have seen any Brexit dividend?

“We were meant to be emerging from the bloc as this global, competitive free-trade leader.

“But now our corporate tax is as high as France.”

Mr Davis responded: “That is what triggered David Frost’s resignation.”

JUST IN: ‘Churchill is a killer!’ Activists demands ex PM’s statue ‘torn down’

He continued: “Like me, he saw that there were opportunities to be had out of Brexit but you had to grasp them!

“There weren’t just going to land in your lap.”

Ms Tominey pressed: “Was he not been aggressive enough in grasping them?”

Mr Davis said: “I don’t think the Government has generally.

“We have a spectacular example of how successful deregulation can be with the vaccine success.

“We beat the world at that. We accelerated the time it took to get something cleared.

“It reinforces David Frost’s point that Boris Johnson has to insist on his own instincts.”

DON’T MISS:

Emmanuel Macron accused of snubbing France for Brussels [INTERVIEW]
SpaceX live-stream abruptly cuts when mysterious UFO spotted [VIDEO]
Brexit LIVE: EU in vicious blast at Truss as tensions boil [LIVE BLOG]

This comes as Lord Frost used his first major interview since leaving the cabinet to warn Mr Johnson to commit to low taxes and the free market or risk losing the next election

The Tory peer told the Mail on Sunday: “We need to get the country going economically again and that means free markets, free debate and low taxes.

“People need to look at this country and think: yes, something is changing here. You’ve got to set the direction of travel.

“If we’re going to get out of this little trough and win the election in a couple of years’ time, then we’ve got to develop that.”

Senior members of the cabinet like Jacob Rees-Mogg, the leader of the Commons, have also pressed Mr Johnson to scrap his plans for a rise in national insurance contributions this April.

Source: Read Full Article