Under pressure to reveal her Brexit blueprint, British Prime Minister Theresa May's office said she will call for a "truly global Britain" that is more open to the world when she sets out plans for negotiations with the EU in a speech later this week. Treasury chief Philip Hammond told the German newspaper Welt am Sonntag that Britain is prepared to "do whatever we have to do", including turning away from Europe to other markets, to protect its economy.
Hammond also suggested that Britain could cut taxes to encourage companies to move to the UK.
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, meanwhile, suggested that May was prepared to trigger a full-scale "trade war" to get her way.
The comments come amid a standoff over migration into Britain. While Britain wants to curtail immigration from Europe, the EU says the UK must abide by rules guaranteeing the free movement of people if it wants to retain tariff-free access to the bloc's market of more than 500 million people.
"May calls for clean hard Brexit," declared the Sunday Times. "May's big gamble on a clean Brexit," The Sunday Telegraph said.
Writing in the Sunday Times, David Davis, the British secretary of state for exiting the EU, underscored the government's position by saying Britain would "respect the views of the British people" and demand control over immigration.
May has said for months that she will invoke Article 50 of the EU's key treaty, formally beginning the process of negotiating Britain's departure, by March 31.
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