Rudd: I won’t ‘lie down in front of the bulldozers’ of a no-deal Brexit
Work and pensions secretary Amber Rudd today said her department is preparing for a no-deal Brexit, and could hire more people to deal with a potential recession.
Speaking to the BBC’s Andrew Marr, Rudd said that the consequences of leaving the European Union without a deal “will be difficult to handle”.
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But the Department for Work and Pensions would have to be ready to deal with the consequences, she said.
“We are preparing for it, we are making sure that should that happen, should there be a no-deal Brexit, and should there be an adverse consequence to the employment levels … then we’ll have to make sure that we do recruit more people in order to deal with it,” she said.
Rudd was one of the Conservative MPs who broke with Prime Minister Theresa May in a bid to rule out a no-deal Brexit earlier this year.
But the work and pensions secretary said she no longer thinks that a second referendum is preferable to leaving without a deal.
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Rudd, who is supporting Jeremy Hunt’s bid to be Tory leader, said she would no longer “lie down in front of the bulldozers” of a no-deal Brexit.
“I accept I’ve changed, but I accept the circumstances have changed as well,” she said.