EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier says Brexit trade negotiations will continue past Thursday deadline set by UK. [ Ссылка ] #eudebates #Brexit #EuropeanParliament #UnitedKingdom #Barnier #Ireland #BREXITDeal #NoDeal EU-UK relations
UK Brexit negotiator ‘disappointed’ by EU summit!
David Frost says he’s ‘surprised EU is no longer committed to working ‘intensively’ to reach a future partnership.”
U.K. chief negotiator David Frost has given his initial response to the European Council summit conclusions on Brexit — and it's not positive.
“Disappointed by the euco conclusions on UK/EU negotiations. Surprised EU is no longer committed to working 'intensively' to reach a future partnership,” Frost tweeted, pointing out that intensive talks had been agreed with Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on October 3.
“Also surprised by suggestion that to get an agreement all future moves must come from UK. It's an unusual approach to conducting a negotiation,” he added.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson will set out the U.K.'s full “reactions and approach” on Friday, Frost said.
The EU's chief negotiator Michel Barnier said at the summit that he has suggested to the U.K. that his team come to London on Monday to continue the negotiations. The week after the U.K. negotiators could come to Brussels. "That's in any case what I have proposed to the British team."
European Union chief negotiator Michel Barnier said Brexit trade negotiations will continue past Thursday’s deadline set by U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, and could continue into next month.
At an EU summit, the 27-country bloc's leaders came out united to still seek a deal despite the dwindling time for agreement.
“The negotiations aren’t over," Barnier said. “We shall remain available until the last possible day." Barnier added that his team would be traveling to London for more talks next week and would host negotiations in Brussels the week after that.
He also insisted that EU negotiators “are prepared to speed up negotiations,” countering a Tweet form his U.K. counterpart David Frost that said: ”“Surprised EU is no longer committed to working 'intensively' to reach a future partnership.”
Barnier said he saw talks continuing for “two or three weeks.”
Johnson had set the first day of the EU summit on Thursday as the deadline to get a trade and security deal to replace Britain's EU membership that expired on Jan. 31. A transition period is set to end on Jan. 1, forcing negotiators to work fast if any deal still is to get legislative approval and legal vetting in the little time left.
EU leaders quickly addressed the issue at the opening of their two-day summit, and in a statement they called “on the U.K. to make the necessary moves to make an agreement possible."
Knowing the chances of a deal are slimmer by the day, they also urged all in the EU to “step up their work on preparedness and readiness at all levels and for all outcomes, including that of no agreement."
“It is for the U.K. now to commit itself and there are far too many areas where things don't progress as they should," said Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte.
Beyond the call for speed, the leaders were also set to flaunt their unity, something Britain has failed to dent during years of talks on the withdrawal conditions and now on a bare trade deal with the new non-member.
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Johnson's office said after a video call with EU leaders Charles Michel and Ursula von der Leyen that the prime minister “looked forward to hearing the outcome of the European (Summit) and would reflect before setting out the U.K.'s next steps."
Few doubt that Johnson will lean toward continuing the talks for a few more weeks. The negotiations remain in a deep rut over differences on the issues of state aid, common standards of regulation and fishing rights.
“Britain has already imposed so many deadlines that came and went," said Rutte, arguing it was time to concentrate on content instead. During the Brexit divorce talks several deadlines were imposed as a final chance to get a deal, only to see both sides grudgingly negotiate further afterward.
All acknowledge that little progress was made recently on the key issues. Johnson's office said that the prime minister in his talks with the two EU leaders “expressed his disappointment that more progress had not been made over the past two weeks.”
A trade deal has the potential to save hundreds of thousands of jobs and would avoid worsening the economic crisis brought on by the coronavirus pandemic.
“With COVID-19 having such a devastating impact on society and on the economies in the United Kingdom and across Europe, obviously I think leaders will not want to hit citizens with a shock in terms of what a no-deal would represent, a significant additional shock to our respective societies and economies," Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin said.
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