But what has Boris Johnson done?
He has picked up a bad treaty,
he has amended it,
he has made it slightly better
in terms of the customs union
membership for Great Britain.
But in doing so, he has hived off
a part of the United Kingdom,
despite his own promises
that he would never do any such thing.
But the problem is it doesn't
get Brexit done.
All it does is take us into
another three years
of agonising negotiations with yes,
you've guessed it,
Michel Barnier in charge.
And what Barnier has set out already
in that political declaration,
is there will be no free trade deal
with the European Union,
unless we stay part, effectively,
of the common fisheries policy.
There will be no free trade deal
unless our total bill for leaving
has actually risen from £39bn
to $65bn.
There will be no free trade deal
unless our state aid rules
stay under the European Union,
meaning we could not help
British Steel or anybody else
we chose.
And it will mean above all
that our free trade deal means
we will have to continue
in regulatory alignment
on social policy, employment policy,
environmental law and even taxation.
Here is the problem with the proposition
that Boris Johnson is putting
to the British people:
it is not Brexit.
It's not Brexit.
[Applause]
It's a sellout.
It is a sellout.
