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Mayne to maintain its assets in a safe state after the Brexit vote will be a "disaster", said another minister.

"They would like to keep the state as it is. I don't see that happening," Sir Malcolm Rifkind said.

"There's a perception that the government will go down and make money from Brexit... in which case the country should move on."

Analysis by BBC Europe editor Paul Wood

But what the government may not realise is the government's Brexit strategy has to go into the heart of Westminster - and so what we hear more and more of are ministers and Brexiters arguing there's nothing to do but stick to one policy area.

A cabinet meeting on Wednesday on the need to move to a single market or customs union, in the shape of the Northern Ireland border, is another case in point.

There will be one single plan being discussed by ministers - on Brexit - and the government should stay focused on that.

But this is now where some in the Brexit camp want it to go, they say - to a much bigger effort at what is now referred to as "dementia reform".

Many other areas of Brexit strategy must therefore be discussed more by May and government, and in particular the so-called "whole of European" strategy.

So far the government has kept a pretty low profile around these issues. But Sir Malcolm is right that, if the Brexiters want a fight, it can still happen.
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G8 moves away from pure austerity as austerity becomes neo-liberalism," says Professor Paul Mason-Brown, director of economics at Nottingham Trent University. "It is in this sense that the SNP seems more likely than the Conservatives to become the next coalition partner – and that is a very exciting prospect. It is worth remembering that the SNP have had to prove their own credentials in terms of economics and policies before. They have already demonstrated this and proved their record on the economy to be superior, although they would obviously have to improve on the performance in recent years."

For years the Tories have focused their policy on the economy and on reducing its costs; this, according to Mason-Brown, has helped them win the general election in May. But while they might be successful in reducing welfare spending and tax receipts, it is not their vision of a better society. As they grow older, the SNP may see their time in government reduced by the loss of voters, he said, but it would also lose support among those aged 55 to 64.

"It is probably because of this demographic change that in 2014 the Conservatives won 48 per cent of the vote but lost the number three seat – the first time that happened since the Second World War," he said. "I think people are worried by the fact that the Tories are struggling for the number one spot. With that being the case, there is a risk that their focus is on balancing the books and delivering on the promises made – policies such as £10 and £15 an hour."

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Ngày 21 tháng 6 năm 2020