FAILING to deliver Brexit would "tear the fabric of society" apart in Britain, Sajid Javid has warned.

The Chancellor told Tory party delegates in Manchester today that Britain was ready to quit the bloc now - and would be leaving with or without a deal in days.

3 Javid told delegates that No10 was ready to leave the EU Credit: AFP or licensors

3 Boris Johnson gives Sajid Javid a thumbs up as the Chancellor addresses the Tory Party conference Credit: Reuters

MATTER OF DAYS

Mr Javid said today: "The most reckless course of all would be to not deliver Brexit at all.

"If we fail to deliver on the instruction of the British people, we are in danger of tearing the very fabric of our democracy.

"A fabric that has been carefully woven together over centuries.

"And if we do that, I fear we may not be able to stitch it up again."

If Brits were to have faith in politics they have to "follow through" on the historic referendum and deliver the result, he insisted.

The Chancellor said: No more second-guessing. No best of three.

"One vote. One mandate. One nation, moving forwards together."

And he vowed that PM Boris would take us out of the EU no matter what it took.

“It’s not a matter of if - it’s a matter of days," he said.

“Thirty one days - deal, or no deal.

Mr Javid also tore into Remainer MPs after it was revealed that an Alliance group plans to make the PM beg Brussels for a Brexit extension earlier than planned.

They’re so split down the middle… that even their leader and their Shadow Chancellor don’t agree on whether they support Brexit. Sajid Javid

He told them that "democracy isn't just for when it suits you" and accused them of "tearing the very fabric of democracy".

The Chancellor also blasted Labour for its muddled Brexit position - while taking a swipe at leader Jeremy Corbyn and Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell.

He said: "They’re so split down the middle… that even their leader and their Shadow Chancellor don’t agree on whether they support Brexit.

"So they’ll hold another referendum with two options: perhaps, and maybe.

"What a leader.

"A man for the many Brexit positions, not the few."

Mr Javid's comments come after Lib Dem boss Jo Swinson met with Mr Corbyn, Ian Blackford, the SNP Westminster leader, and representatives of Plaid Cymru, the Greens and the Independent Group for Change this afternoon.

The group want to change the law so that Boris is forced to go cap in hand to Brussels sooner rather than later.

Under the Benn Act – the Brexit-blocking legislation pushed through the Commons last month – Mr Johnson is legally obliged to go cap in hand to Brussels by October 19.

But the Remainer group worries this does not leave enough time for a legal bid to block No Deal - before we leave the EU on October 31 - despite the Act stopping just that.



PAYRISE PLEDGE

Mr Javid also promised that four million hard-working Brits will get a pay rise to £10.50 an hour by 2024.

The Chancellor revealed he would hike pay for the lowest paid Brits in society.

The National Living Wage is currently £8.21, but that only applies to people over 25.

He also promised to bring millions more people into the higher minimum wage by lowering that age limit down to 21.

Mr Javid used his keynote speech to reveal a major overhaul of the nation’s creaking bus network to help struggling Brits get about.

We understand that preparing to leave without a deal is not only the responsible thing to do… but also the best way of leaving with a deal. Sajid Javid

The Chancellor also pledged billions to boost Britain’s infrastructure, with a new national bus strategy as his centrepiece.

The plan restores closed down countryside routes, set up new ‘super-bus’ network with more stops outside of cities, and create of the UK's first all-electric bus town.

It has been devised to tackle Labour’s popular election offer to voters for better bus services head on.

Mr Javid told delegates: “Investment in our infrastructure will be key to making the next decade one of renewal – boosting our economy and making life easier for people all across the country.

“This will make the UK a better place to live and work, extending opportunity and raising living standards for all.”

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The Chancellor also unveiled £5bn to support the roll out of full fibre broadband and the 5G mobile network, and new money to upgrade key roads.

Mr Javid also announced the first projects in the Government’s roads fund – which includes dualling the A66 Trans-Pennine expressway and the A46 Newark bypass, widening the A12 in Essex, and improving the M60 Simister Island interchange in Manchester.

3 Boris Johnson smiles during the speech of Chancellor Sajid Javid

Chancellor Sajid Javid vows pay rise for four million Brits to £10.50 an hour by 2025

Theresa May snubs David Cameron's book and insists 'I have no regrets' over failing to deliver Brexit THERESA May has snubbed David Cameron's book and insisted she won't be reading it. Speaking for the first time since she stepped down as PM in August, the Maidenhead MP admitted: "I genuinely don't read political books." She said: "I probably shouldn't admit to this, but I would rather sit down with a good thriller or a detective book rather than read a political memoir." Mrs May, 62, was interviewed by Olympic rower Katherine Grainger at the Henley Literature Festival today - and even revealed that she was thinking of writing a memoir of her own but she wasn't "rushing" to do so. And she claimed she didn't regret anything over her time in office - despite failing repeatedly to deliver Brexit. Asked if she had any regrets in her career, Mrs May added: "No I don't think so. I have had a fantastic time." But she did say she wished her parents, who died when she was in her early 20s, could have lived to see her reach Britain's top political job. She said: "They didn't even live to see me become a local councillor, let alone being PM. I hope they would have been proud." The ex-PM told the audience she was a Harry Potter fan too - and her favourite villains were Lord Voldemort, and Professor Moriarty in Sherlock Holmes. "They are proper villains," she added. I think it's good when you have a villain who you know is a villain."

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