Brexit: Theresa May 'hologram' prime minister, Jones claims

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Media caption,

Carwyn Jones said the UK and Welsh Labour parties must unite to fight a hard Brexit

The prime minister and her cabinet "lack the basic skills" to get a good Brexit deal, First Minister Carwyn Jones has claimed.

He told the Labour Party conference in Brighton Theresa May was "incapable of listening to other people's views".

The UK government has previously warned him not to "undermine Brexit talks".

Relations between the Labour-run Welsh Government and Conservative UK government have been strained over the negotiations, with Mr Jones repeatedly accusing Westminster of trying to take power back from Cardiff Bay.

It had been hoped that talks between Mr Jones and the prime minister's deputy Damian Green would be a chance to "reset the relationship" between the administrations.

But, in his speech to the annual Labour conference on Sunday, Mr Jones accused Mrs May of disappearing and being a "hologram" prime minister when it came to her handling of Brexit.

Mr Jones, who compared the Brexit process with the nine circles of hell in Dante's The Divine Comedy, also accused Mrs May and her cabinet of "failing the country" in the negotiations.

Meanwhile, Mr Jones said there should be no second referendum on the terms of Brexit, but said all four UK parliaments should agree on the final deal.

Speaking to BBC Radio Wales' Sunday Supplement programme, he said he wanted to be "more positive" than calling it a veto.

"I want to recommend the assembly says yes [to the deal] but what would that take?" he said.

"Full and unfettered access to the single market, no cliff-edge. About 67% of Welsh exports go to the European market. We have to be absolutely sure they are not fettered."

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The Welsh Government had hoped to "reset the relationship" between the two administrations during Mr Jones and Mr Green's meeting

In a speech in which he paid tribute to the late former First Minister Rhodri Morgan, Mr Jones said there must be no diminishing of Welsh Labour's voice within the UK Labour party in the future and Labour had to "work together more than ever before" to fight hard-Brexit fundamentalists.

It came after several Welsh Labour MPs and former Welsh Secretary Lord Hain were among 30 leading party figures to sign an open letter calling on Labour to toughen its pro-EU stance.

Mr Jones again accused Westminster of trying to take back powers devolved to Cardiff Bay in the European Union (Withdrawal Bill), which aims to ensure rules currently set by European law still apply in the UK after Brexit, while giving UK Parliament power to change them.

He said the Welsh Government was "fighting tooth and nail against the Tory power-grab dressed up" in the Withdrawal Bill.

Mr Jones has already raised concerns that powers over the issues such as farming subsidies - currently decided in Brussels by the EU - will, in future, be held at Westminster, rather than being handed to the Welsh Government which is responsible for farming in Wales.

"It shows up their government as simply incapable of listening to other people's views or respecting their legitimate interests: in other words, as lacking the basic skills needed to negotiate successfully," he said.

"We are fighting a real threat to devolution as we have known it for the past 20 years."