Home Secretary Amber Rudd has hit back at Brexiteers in the Conservative Party over attacks on the civil service.
Ms Rudd said backbencher Jacob Rees-Mogg was "wrong" to accuse the Treasury of "fiddling the figures" with forecasts showing the UK would be worse off outside the EU.
The leaked forecast that sparked the row was a cross-departmental "tool" to "help inform the debate", she said.
Ms Rudd also said ministers were more united over Brexit than critics claim.
Negotiations are taking place between the UK and the EU ahead of the UK's scheduled exit in March 2019.
Ahead of a week of key meetings, Theresa May is facing growing calls to set out in detail what she wants to secure from the meetings - in particular how closely-bound the UK will be to the EU after it leaves.
Writing in the Sunday Telegraph, Bernard Jenkin, a Conservative MP who was a key Leave campaigner, accused the government of being "vague" and "divided" on the issue.
But Ms Rudd told the BBC's Andrew Marr she had "a surprise for the Brexiteers", that the key Brexit committee of ministers was "more united than they think".
The cabinet agrees on the need for "frictionless trade", the ability to strike international trade deals and avoid a hard border in Ireland, she said.
And on the key point of the customs union - which currently prevents the UK from striking international trade deals - she suggested "a form of customs agreement" would be needed.
Last week International Trade Secretary Liam Fox said it was "very difficult" to see how staying in a customs union would allow the UK to have an "independent trade policy" after Brexit.
Whitehall backlash
The role of the civil service has been thrust into the limelight in recent days by a leaked analysis predicting an economic hit to the UK after Brexit.
Ms Rudd said the report did not "model everything" and predicted the UK economy would "absolutely grow" after Brexit, but said putting up trade barriers would have "consequences".
She said she had been "surprised" at Mr Rees-Mogg's remarks and described the civil service as the envy of the world, adding that ministerial Brexit colleague Steve Baker - who has clashed with Whitehall unions and apologised to Parliament - had had an "interesting week".
Meanwhile, Andrew Turnbull, who was cabinet secretary under Tony Blair, told the Observer that attacks on the civil service were similar to tactics used by German nationalists between the two world wars.
The UK and the EU do not currently agree on whether EU citizens moving to the UK during the planned two-year transition period after Brexit should get the same long-term rights as those who arrive before the UK leaves.
Defending the UK's position, Ms Rudd said it was "right to have a distinction between before March 2019 and afterwards".
Collective responsibility
Chancellor Philip Hammond has been the focus of much of the criticism from Brexiteers in the Conservative Party, and in his Telegraph article Mr Jenkin suggested Mr Hammond was not toeing the party line.
"If ministers are vague or divided, life for officials becomes impossible, as we can see now. Ministerial collective responsibility really matters," he said.
He added: "If the prime minister sticks to one policy and the chancellor keeps advocating another, what are officials meant to do?"
Earlier this month, Mr Hammond suggested the UK's relationship with the EU would change only "very modestly" after Brexit.
But Mr Jenkin urged the prime minister to stick to her position and ensure, among other things, Britain leaves the single market and customs union.
He wrote: "She can only command a majority in Parliament on her present policy.
"Her MPs will back her, because we are overwhelmingly at one with the majority of the British people who now want a clean Brexit and an end to the present uncertainty."
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