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Sajid Javid attacks Boris Johnson over comments about Muslim women: 'No serious politician should use language like that'

Home secretary also dismisses claims parliament could be suspended to stop MPs blocking no-deal Brexit, as suggested by rival Dominic Raab, as 'anti-British' and 'complete nonsense'

Benjamin Kentish
Political Correspondent
Thursday 06 June 2019 13:40 EDT
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Boris Johnson under fire for comparing niqab-wearing women to 'letter boxes'

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Sajid Javid has hit out at two of his rivals for the Tory leadership, claiming Dominic Raab's position on Brexit is "complete nonsense" and condemning Boris Johnson's previous comments about Muslim women.

The home secretary, one of 11 candidates vying to succeed Theresa May, said suggestions that parliament could be suspended if it tries to block a no-deal Brexit were "anti-British" and "rubbish". Mr Raab said on Wednesday that he would not rule out such a move.

As the gloves came off in the Conservative leadership contest, Mr Javid attacked Mr Johnson over his previous claim that women who wear the Muslim niqab look like "letterboxes" or "a bank robber".

Asked by The Independent about the remarks, which led to the former foreign secretary being investigated by the Conservative Party, Mr Javid told an event organised by the British Future think-tank: "I think they're wrong. I don't think any serious politician should use language like that."

It was on the issue of Brexit, though, that Mr Javid launched his strongest denunciation of a leadership rival.

Speaking after Mr Raab caused uproar by refusing to rule out proroguing parliament to prevent it stopping the UK leaving the EU without a deal, he said: “I’m not into this proroguing parliament rubbish. It’s a complete nonsense. It’s anti-democratic and anti-British.”

The home secretary said he would be unwilling to delay Brexit beyond 31 October and would prefer a no-deal exit to a further extension.

He said: "All the policies I would have if I was prime minister would all be based on leaving by 31 October.

"I want to do that by a deal - that would be my absolute preference and that's what I'd work incredible hard on. I will still keep working on no deal, not because I want it but because it's the responsible thing to do.

"But if we get to 31 October and we have to choose between no deal and no Brexit, I would choose no deal."

However, he suggested he would follow parliament's decision, even if MPs voted to delay or reverse Brexit.

He said: "If parliament tries to block it, I do accept that parliament is divided. It's this parliament, it's this speaker and I accept that. I would respond to parliament as you would expect a responsible prime minister to do.

"I wouldn't get involved - it's parliament's business what it wants to debate. I don't think I should try to frustrate parliament in that way but I would do everything in my power to try to leave on 31 October."

Speaking afterwards, a source in Mr Javid's campaign team said: "We're deciding a prime minister, not a dictator. He's not going to break the law - no responsible prime minister would break the law."

The home secretary said he would deliver a Brexit deal by finding a technological solution to the issue of how to keep the Northern Irish border open once Britain leaves the EU. He insisted this was possible within two years, removing the need for the controversial Northern Ireland backstop to come into force.

John Bercow dismisses suggestions parliament could be suspended to push through a no-deal Brexit

Earlier this year, a leaked Home Office document suggested that this technology could not be implemented until at least 2030.

But Mr Javid said: "You can absolutely have an open border on the island of Ireland with no infrastructure using existing technology, and it can be done in a couple of years."

He said the UK government should offer to pay for the technology in order to encourage the Irish government to accept the plan.

Mr Javid also criticised the Conservatives' promise to reduce net migration to the tens of thousands - a key plank of the party's immigration policy in recent years.

He said: "I just think it's nonsense to set a target of tens of thousands that you know you can never meet."

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