"First of all, I have always said no deal is better than a bad deal. I think a bad deal would be for example a deal that broke up the United Kingdom… What we have put on the table is a good deal; it’s a deal which retains the union of the United Kingdom, our constitutional integrity," May told reporters flying with her to the UN General Assembly in New York, as quoted by the Financial Times newspaper.
May's statement comes after senior Conservative party members, including former Brexit secretary David Davis, endorsed calls for a UK-EU trade agreement replicating the existing Canada model.
Leaving 10 Downing Street after an open & honest exchange with @theresa_may @DLidington @DominicRaab pic.twitter.com/dNL0r3KShv
— Guy Verhofstadt (@guyverhofstadt) September 24, 2018
On Monday, the UK Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), a Westminster-based free-market think tank, issued an alternative plan for London's trade relations with the European Union and the rest of the world after Brexit, urging the government to drop the Chequers proposal.
There are over 3 million EU citizens living in the UK who will be understandably worried about what the outcome of yesterday’s summit means for their future. I want to be clear with you that even in the event of no deal your rights will be protected. pic.twitter.com/BkFnZeQPSh
— Theresa May (@theresa_may) September 21, 2018
Under the Chequers plan, adopted by the UK cabinet in July, London and Brussels could create a free trade area for goods and maintain a "common rulebook" for all goods. The European Union, however, rejected the proposal as undermining the single market.