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Mr Johnson was elected MP for Orpington in 2010 and was made transport minister in January[/caption]
Jo Johnson has quit as transport minister and called for the public to have a fresh say on Brexit.
The MP, who is Boris Johnson’s brother, said the withdrawal deal being negotiated with the European Union “will be a terrible mistake”. Arguing Britain was “on the brink of the greatest crisis” since World War Two, he said what was on offer wasn’t “anything like what was promised”. Downing Street thanked him for his work but ruled out another referendum. Jo Johnson voted to remain in the EU in the 2016 referendum while his brother Boris, who quit as foreign secretary in July, was a leading Brexiteer. His brother praised his decision, saying they were “united in dismay” at the PM’s handling of the negotiations. Cabinet ministers have been invited this week to read the UK’s draft withdrawal deal with the EU. Theresa May has said the withdrawal deal is 95% done – but there is no agreement yet on how to guarantee no hard border in Northern Ireland. On Friday the DUP, whose support Theresa May relies on for votes in the Commons, said they cannot support any deal which included the possibility that Northern Ireland would be treated differently from the rest of the UK. Mr Johnson, the MP for Orpington in Kent, said the choice being finalised was either:- an agreement which would leave the UK “economically weakened with no say in the EU rules it must follow”, or
- a “no-deal Brexit” which would “inflict untold damage on our nation”.