
And we will use this investment prudently and strategically to level up every part of the United Kingdom, while strengthening the ties that bind us together. This means that debt will be lower at the end of this Parliament – rather than spiralling out of control as it would have done under Labour. Our fiscal rules mean that public sector net investment will not average more than 3 per cent of GDP, and that if debt interest reaches 6 per cent of revenue, we will reassess our plans to keep debt under control. We will not borrow to fund day-to-day spending, but will invest thoughtfully and responsibly in infrastructure right across our country in order to increase productivity and wages. We will keep costs down for small businesses – rather than hiking their taxes and crushing Britain’s prosperity. We will help people and families throughout their lives by bringing down the cost of living and making sure that work always pays. Our new majority Conservative Government will give the public services the resources they need, supporting our hospitals, our schools and our police. The strength of the UK’s balance sheet – the hard work done by all of us in this country – means that we are now in a position to invest properly in our future. We’ve helped millions of people into work, halving the unemployment rate. We’ve doubled the personal allowance to £12,500, meaning that every worker gets to keep more of what they earn. We’ve introduced and consistently raised the National Living Wage – and will raise it still further. Thanks to Conservative policies, employment is at a near-record high. Because of the tough decisions that our party made and our success in bringing down the deficit, the economy has continued to grow and the public finances have been restored. Unleash Britain’s Potential For the past nine years, the Conservatives have been cleaning up Labour’s mess. In parallel, we will legislate to ensure high standards of workers’ rights, environmental protection and consumer rights. We will negotiate a trade agreement next year – one that will strengthen our Union – and we will not extend the implementation period beyond December 2020.
#We get it done full#
Ensure we are in full control of our fishing waters.Raise standards in areas like workers’ rights, animal welfare, agriculture and the environment.Introduce an Australian-style points-based immigration system.This future relationship will be one that allows us to: We will keep the UK out of the single market, out of any form of customs union, and end the role of the European Court of Justice. There will be no political alignment with the EU.
#We get it done free#
This will be a new relationship based on free trade and friendly cooperation, not on the EU’s treaties or EU law. It puts the whole country on a path to a new free trade agreement with the EU. It allows us to pass our own laws and ensures that it is our courts that enforce them

It takes us out of the customs union, allowing us to set our own tariffs and do our own trade deals. Now that we have elected a majority of Conservative MPs to Parliament, we will start putting our deal through Parliament before Christmas and we will leave the European Union in January.īoris Johnson’s new deal takes the whole country out of the EU as one United Kingdom. So that we can deliver on the people’s decision in 2016 and use our new post-Brexit freedoms to transform the UK for the better by focusing on your priorities. So that we can push past the obstacles that other parties have put in our country’s way. Our priority as Conservatives is to get Brexit done – so that we can unleash the potential of this great country.

The public services cannot get the attention they deserve. Families and businesses cannot make vital decisions.


Investment is waiting to come into the country. But he swiftly negotiated a great new deal – despite Parliament’s best efforts to block his progress.Īnd then, when he put it to MPs, they insisted on yet more delay. Get Brexit Done When the new Government entered Downing Street, the Prime Minister made a simple promise: to get Brexit done.
