The Brexiteer chairman of JD Wetherspoon on Wednesday revealed his pubs chain will stop selling Jägermeister and French brandies ahead of Britain leaving the EU.

Tim Martin said Germany’s Jägermeister, which is Wetherspoons’ third-biggest selling spirit and is used for Jägerbombs, will no longer be served from September 26.

Courvoisier VS and LVMH-owned Hennessy Fine de Cognac will also be pulled.

Jägermeister will be replaced by English herbal liqueur Strika and new American and Australian brandies will also be introduced.

Martin told the Evening Standard the move would reduce prices by 10p per drink. He thinks “the UK will trade on a global basis rather than with a European bias” after Brexit.

The move is part of a product review which saw the firm stop serving champagne in July.

Martin added: “We will continue to review all products over the next 24 months, with the object of making the business more competitive and offering the best choice and value for customers."

Guy Lawrence, the boss of Jägermeister UK, said the firm is “disappointed”, but pointed out there is huge demand for the product across Britain, not just in Wetherspoon’s 880 watering holes.