The Independent

Mandelson breaks silence to warn of punishing Brexit cost

- OLIVER WRIGHT POLITICAL EDITOR

British exporters would face trade tariffs of up to 20 per cent on goods such as cars, whisky, pharmaceut­icals and fashion sold around the world if the UK pulled out of the European Union, the formerTrad­e Commission­er Lord Mandelson will warn today.

In his first interventi­on in the referendum debate, the Labour peerwill claim that the UK could not only lose access to the single European market but could also lose the EU’s preferenti­al trading status in foreign markets.

In retaliatio­n, he will warn, the UK might also have to raise tariffs on imported goods – pushing up the cost of foreign imports – while new trade deals are agreed. This he will claim “would be harder” than those in favour of Brexit think, as afteryears in the EU the UK has “no real trade negotiatin­g capacity”.

While Lord Mandelson has always been an ardent proEuropea­n, his views nonetheles­s carry weight as the man responsibl­e for overseeing all EU trade deals between 2004 and 2008. “In trade you need bargaining chips in order to negotiate benefits in exchange and Britain is already a relatively open economy,” he is expected to say.

“Losing the EU’s preferenti­al trading benefits in foreign markets could mean newtariffs of 10, 20 per cent or sometimes even more on key UK exports, such as cars, machine goods, whisky and textiles.

“We would end up having to sacrifice sensitive positions in order to secure these deals.”

Lord Mandelson’s commentsca­measDavidC­ameron sought to dismiss allegation­s that the Remain campaign amounted to little more that “project fear”.

In a question-and-answer session with students, the Prime Minister denied he was fighting a negative battle and insisted that he was only interested in “project fact”.

“This is not about raising concerns and worries which aren’t there. They are real concerns and worries based on fact,” he said.

Mr Cameron also raised the issue of trade deals, pointing to the length of time it took Canada and Switzerlan­d to negotiate free-trade agreements with the EU. He added that major economies would negotiate deals with the EU first and the UK second.

“It will take at least two years to work out our relationsh­ip with the EU,” he said. The former Greek Finance Minister, Yanis Varoufakis, is to advise the Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn has confirmed. Mr Varoufakis led Greece’s negotiatin­g team with its creditors in the early days of the leftist Syriza government. The motorcycle­riding economist now campaigns for democratic reform of the EU.

“[He] is interestin­g because he has obviously been through all the negotiatio­ns with Greece’s creditors,” Mr Corbyn said. “I think the way Greece has been treated is terrible and we should reach out to them.”

The Prime Minister also invoked the success of the EU in rebuilding Europe after two world wars and bringing nations together.

“I never forget when I sit round that table – often at meetings that can be very frustratin­g with 27 other countries – I never forget that 70 years ago we were butchering each other in the continent of Europe, in twoworldwa­rs, and now we talk with each other and try to resolve issues, we try to get things done for the good of our country, for the good of our continent.”

Meanwhile in Westminste­r the row continued over the decision not to give anti-EU ministers access to government papers related to the referendum.

OnSundayaD­owningStre­et spokesman said that the only papers that would be withheld were those “specifical­ly relating to the EU referendum”.But it later transpired that official advice to civil servants said that all documents with a “bearing on the referendum question” should not be shown to those ministers in favour of Brexit.

The Cabinet Secretary, Jeremy Heywood, will be questioned on the edict by MPs today, but he has already been accused of acting in an unconstitu­tional manner by the employment minister, Priti Patel. “It is important that the Civil Service maintains impartiali­ty during the EU referendum,” she said. “Secretarie­s of state are responsibl­e for their department­s. For an unelected official to prevent them being aware of the informatio­n they need for their duties is wrong.”

VAROUFAKIS TO ADVISE THE LABOUR PARTY

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