Former PM says Brexit will allow the UK to do its own deals and ‘economically advanced Commonwealth countries are the obvious place to start’

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

Former prime minister Tony Abbott has urged the UK and Australia to strive for a one-page free trade agreement once Britain is no longer constrained by the “statism and bureaucracy of Brussels”.

Brexit means that Britain is back Tony Abbott

In a foreword written for a report by the UK’s Free Enterprise Group, Abbott says “Brexit means that Britain is back” and he calls for the movement of goods between the UK and Australia to be “absolutely free of tariffs or quotas”.

The report by the Conservative MP James Cleverly and Tim Hewish was released on Tuesday and argues that Britain should leave the European Customs Union and embrace Commonwealth trade.

Abbott wrote that Britain’s decision to leave the European Union was not a vote against free trade “because the EU has acted as a protectionist bloc against trade with outsiders”.

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Brexit gave Britain the chance to do its own trade deals, he said.

“Free trade agreements with economically advanced Commonwealth countries are the obvious place for Britain to start.”

Abbott said no two countries were more like-minded than Britain and Australia, with a common language, set of values and much shared history.

“If Britain is determined to make the most of Brexit – and everything about Prime Minister (Theresa) May shows this steely determination – why not strive for a one page FTA with Australia?,” he wrote.

Abbott said each country’s product and service standards should be recognised in the other.

“If a car is fit to be sold in Britain, it’s fit to be sold in Australia. If a doctor is fit to practise in Australia, he or she is fit to practise in the UK.”

Abbott said Australians should also be free to live in the UK and vice-versa.

The Free Enterprise Group report urges the UK to look to the Commonwealth’s open economies of Australia, Canada, Singapore and New Zealand to secure FTAs in time for Brexit.