Daily Mail - 03.03.2020

(John Hannent) #1
Daily Mail, Tuesday, March 3, 2020^ Page 21

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‘Cripes! I seem to have birthdays on my mind at the moment’


Britain could be


served up GM


‘Frankenfood’


in US trade deal


Chlorine


chicken


goes of f


the menu!


By John Stevens


Deputy Political Editor


From Saturday’s Mail

Hero terror police in ‘absurd’ crash probe


By Rebecca Camber
Chief Crime Correspondent

GENETICALLY modified
foods from America could
end up on British super-
market shelves as part of
a US trade deal.
Ministers yesterday left
open lifting the ban on prod-
ucts made from GM crops as
their red lines were unveiled
for negotiations.
In a 184-page document set-
ting out objectives, the Govern-
ment categorically ruled out
the NHS from trade talks.
It stated: ‘The NHS will not
be on the table. The price the
NHS pays for drugs will not be
on the table.
‘The services the NHS pro-
vides will not be on the table.
The NHS is not, and never will
be, for sale to the private sector,
whether overseas or domestic.’
However, the negotiating
mandate on food standards was
more ambiguous.
It said: ‘Any agreement will
ensure high standards and pro-
tections for consumers and
workers, and will not compro-
mise on our high environmental
protection, animal welfare and
food standards.’
Officials last night refused to
rule out ditching the GM ban
currently imposed by EU law.
Such a move could prove to
be a key compromise to secure
a deal with the US, where the
majority of processed foods
contain GM ingredients.
The document was revealed
as negotiators yesterday arrived
in Brussels to begin work on an
EU trade deal.
The UK team of 100 officials
led by David Frost started the

first round of talks with a two-
hour meeting with the EU’s
broker Michel Barnier.
They did not shake hands due
to coronavirus fears and wore
lanyards bearing the Union
Flag. A government spokesman
said: ‘The UK will engage con-
structively to reach a Free
Trade Agreement which fully

respects the UK’s political and
regulatory autonomy.’
International Trade Secretary
Liz Truss yesterday insisted the
UK is willing to walk away from
talks with both the US and EU
if the Government does not
agree with what is offered.
She told Sky News: ‘We want a
deal with the EU on Canada-
style terms, if we have to trade
with the EU on Australia-style
terms, we will.
‘Likewise with the US we want
to get a deal as soon as possi-
ble, but we’re certainly not
going to sell out the NHS.
That’s a very clear red line.
‘We’re not going to allow drugs
to cost more on the NHS and
we’re not going to sell out our
food safety and animal welfare
standards. We will walk away in
both cases if it is not a deal that
suits the UK because one of the

key reasons people voted to
leave the EU was to have con-
trol over their own rules.
‘We won’t be told what our
rules and regulations are by the
EU and the US.’
Ministers have already stated
chlorinated chicken will not be
imported from the US.
The Department for Interna-
tional Trade estimated a trade
deal with the US could boost
the UK economy by 0.16 per
cent over the next 15 years.
Miss Truss will today declare
‘Britain is back’ as she addresses
the World Trade Organisation
in Geneva after the country last
month took back its seat at the
table following Brexit.
She will say: ‘The UK will, like
every other sovereign country,
assert its ability to set its own
laws and regulations in line
with our WTO commitments.’

The police watchdog was slammed yester­
day for an ‘absurd’ investigation of two
officers for dangerous driving after one
crashed while racing to a knife attack.
Convicted terrorist Sudesh Amman
stabbed two people on Streatham high
Road, south London on February 2.
he was wearing a fake explosive vest
and was shot dead at the scene. In the

rush to reach him, one officer in a black
BMW crashed into two other motorists.
All three received minor injuries.
A second police driver travelling in con­
voy did not stop at the crash as he consid­
ered it more important to get to the scene

of the attack. But both drivers now face
gross misconduct and dangerous driving
probes. The Metropolitan Police Federa­
tion said the fact the unnamed officers
could lose their jobs when no one was
seriously hurt was a ‘complete joke’.
But the Independent Office for Police
Conduct said it had not taken the decision
to investigate the officers lightly.

Ephraim


Hardcastle


Email: [email protected]

ANDREW retaining his
HRH fuels Harry and
Meghan’s accusation of
double standards. And he
continues to feature in the Court Circular,
the Queen insisting that his birthday was
honoured, as well as his appearance at a
thanksgiving for a former dean of
Windsor. By contrast Harry’s swansong
engagements don’t feature. But it’s not a
snub. He’s told staff not to provide the
information to the official record.

The debate on harry and Meghan’s pro­
tection costs reminds courtiers of An­
drew’s suggestion that, alongside secu­
rity training, royals should be equipped
with guns. After all, the Queen Mother
shot rats with a revolver during the Sec­
ond World War to prepare for Adolf.
Andrew’s idea came to nothing. The com­
pensation bill might have been daunting.

PRINCE Charles constantly asked Hilary
Mantel about the progress of her final
Thomas Cromwell opus. She tells Radio
Times: ‘He would ask how it was coming
along. They must be strange novels for a
future king to read.’ In his remotest
dreams, does the future king yearn for
Henry’s beheading powers?

CARRIe Symonds’s new
PR Sarah Vaughan­
Brown, pictured, was
helpful to Boris and
his fiancee after their
notorious June 2019
shouting match when
a photograph of the
loved­up couple in a
hayfield mysteriously
a p pe ar e d. Wa s i t
taken before or after the domestic spat?
Sarah, then at ITN, confirmed it was
snapped after the plate­smashing row.

JAMES Purnell, £315,000 BBC executive,
seeks London Marathon sponsorship. In
2006, the ex-Labour minister hosted a
party fundraiser where Alastair Campbell
and Cherie Blair autographed a copy of
the Hutton report into the death of Dr
David Kelly. It secured £400, though Tony
Blair later had to answer questions about
it in the Commons on grounds of taste.
Neither Mrs Blair nor Campbell have
contributed to the marathon bid so far.

ANDReW Neil points out that after 38­
year­old Pete Buttigieg’s departure from
the Democratic presidential race, Donald
Trump at 73 is now the youngest male
candidate left, with Joe Biden aged 77
and Bernie Sanders and Michael Bloom­
berg both 78. This prompts James Naugh­
tie to whip out his transatlantic abacus to
tell Radio 4’s World at One: ‘If Pete ran for
president eight elections from now in
2052, he’d still be younger than Joe Biden,
Michael Bloomberg, Bernie Sanders and
Donald Trump.’ Let’s hope James will still
be with us even in his 101st year.

JOHN Cleese offers to meet admirers on
the US video site Fanmio, explaining: ‘It’ll
just be the two of us talking and you can
ask me whatever you want.’ Perhaps the
boobies could inquire why the ex-Python
is charging £235 per intimate chinwag.

JACOB Rees­Mogg offers advice on how to
cope with the coronavirus crisis: ‘Coughs
and sneezes spread diseases, keep it in
your handkerchief,’ adding the Cabinet
mantra: ‘Wash your hands to the national
anthem.’ Sorted!
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