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Opposition MPs might not be able to stop no-deal Brexit, warns SNP’s Westminster leader

SNP Westminster leader Ian Blackford has warned of the economic impact of Brexit Photo: PA / Jane Barlow - Credit: PA Wire/PA Images

The SNP’s Westminster leader has warned that opposition MPs could struggle to stop a no-deal Brexit.

Ian Blackford said any proposition to halt Brexit by revoking Article 50 would have to have teeth and currently it is not clear that would be “particularly easy” to do.

He said a no-deal Brexit would “crash the economy” and that Theresa May’s resignation means an increased threat of leaving the EU without a deal as a default on October 31.

Speaking on the BBC’s Sunday Politics Scotland programme, Blackford said: “What we’re seeing at the moment seems to be a lurch to the right from the Conservative Party, they all seem to be outdoing each other on the no-deal Brexit stakes.

“I think, at the end of the day, there seems to be a very real risk to the people of Scotland, not just the people of Scotland but the people of the United Kingdom, in terms of that no-deal scenario.”

He called for a general election, a people’s vote and for Article 50 to be revoked.

“We need to make sure we can give teeth to any proposition to revoke Article 50, and at the moment it is not clear that, if the government doesn’t bring forward legislation, it’s going to be particularly easy to do that,” he added.

“What Theresa May was talking about was bringing forward a Bill that would be become an Act of Parliament and of course that could be amended and then would give us the option to revoke Article 50 but we simply don’t know at this stage what a new prime minister will do.”

Asked if any prime minister determined to take the UK out of the EU could do so by the default date by not doing much at all, Blackford said: “I’m afraid that is the case. I know that sounds absolutely ridiculous but … that is the default position.

“That’s where we are from the legislation that is already in place so we have to find a way to stop that.

“The best way of doing it, in many respects, is if the new prime minister does bring forward legislation, but on a no-deal basis that it’s possible they could avoid that.

“So we are in a very dangerous, very worrying situation in terms of our future as members of the European Union.”

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