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As clock ticks, EU and UK tell each other to budge on Brexit

Published 20/10/2020, 07:34
Updated 20/10/2020, 19:25
© Reuters. Puzzle with printed EU and UK flags

By Guy Faulconbridge and Gabriela Baczynska

LONDON/BRUSSELS (Reuters) - A frustrated European Union and piqued Britain both exhorted the other on Tuesday to compromise to avoid a fast-approaching disruptive finale to the five-year Brexit drama that would add to economic pain from the coronavirus crisis.

Failure to clinch a trade deal when Britain leaves a standstill transition period on Dec. 31 would sow chaos through supply chains and undermine Europe's economy as it already sees jobs and businesses pulverised by the COVID-19 disease.

After an EU demand for concessions, Prime Minister Boris Johnson broke off talks and said it was time to prepare for a no-deal Brexit.

The EU has since offered to intensify talks and open discussions on legal texts of a draft deal, but Britain maintains there is no basis to resume discussions without a fundamental change in approach.

"My message: we should be making the most out of the little time left," Michel Barnier, the EU's chief negotiator, said after a telephone call with British counterpart David Frost.

"Our door remains open."

The European Commission said it was ready to negotiate though both sides would have to compromise.

Johnson's spokesman said the EU had to show it was taking a fundamentally different approach.

EU diplomats cast Britain's moves as bluster and a frantic bid to secure concessions before a last-minute deal, though an ally of German Chancellor Angela Merkel said chances of a deal were narrowing.

"At the moment, I see the chances worse than 50-50," Detlef Seif, Brexit rapporteur for Merkel's conservatives in the lower house of parliament, told Reuters. "The ball is still in Britain's court at the moment."

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'POSTURING'

There is concern in some European capitals that Johnson may judge that the domestic political benefits and potentially the long-term economic freedom of a noisy no-deal exit outweigh the benefits of a shallow trade deal.

"If they want to get back to the negotiating table, they can," said one EU diplomat. "If they want to jump – we won't be able to stop them."

"All this posturing is only aimed at strengthening Johnson's hand. If they don't want to talk, that's their choice. There is no point at this stage to give them anything more," said another EU diplomat.

Britain formally left the EU at the end of January, but the two sides have been haggling over a deal that would govern $900 billion in trade from car parts to medicines.

Johnson and his Brexit supremo Michael Gove will tell businesses on a video call on Tuesday to step up preparations for the end of the transition period.

Failure to strike a deal with the EU would be "extremely damaging" and cut profits by up to a quarter at carmaker Bentley, its boss told Reuters, as the government urges firms to plan for potential disruption.

Latest comments

Learn how to trade with its procedures for it is not about just drivers picking up goods but proper WTO dovumrntstions- Customs and preventive excise and VAT —— stsrt to learn what trading with WTO means which is called brexit results if your govt csnt ve fair in negotiations but still foolishly keep arguing as if you still have some rights for a frree trsde deal- come a pay your amnual fees then you will have a point to argure but your empty arguements becoming a bore
first the last UK net contribution to the EU was second to Germany. france was way down from the last time i checked. second, you keep banging on about free trade. the UL not reasticly looking for free trade but will if EU maintain their demands. that was the stand off. Three , the french refuse the deal unless the get free fish as you hv said in the past "nothing is for free". Not all your EU members agree on the way the EU were trying to negotiate hence the change of approach.
Just leave in peace
we would but unfortunetly as in any devorce deal you get individuals like yourself that make it very bitter. if we wern't the second largest net contributer after germany to the EU the EU wouldn't be so worried.
Learn how to trade and its procedures then you wont meccessarily have that much trucks lined up at the ports. However WTO is good for yiour govt.... the state makes a lot of money from you all paying duties and penalties before goods get onto the UK- this is the way your govt benifits from WTO-
you right about the indivudal gov do make money off WTO but with the same reasoning cenetal EU make their money off of 1/2 too 2/3 of EU members. france is approximatly mid-way so you dont have much to win or loose.one of many reasons why central EU are worried the UK are leaving is they were seco d hightest net income. now the remain hv to fill the gap. nothing is free when you read the small print.
You are mad to believe you leave them expect - stupidity to all levels - WTO or bones
The UK government will deliver WTO Brexit but while this is commendable it won't save it from voters covid wrath. The clock is indeed ticking.
yes, bad timing
The entire EU member stares wont give a free trade and not just France for nothing is this world is for free- stick it up there for ones
sorry but once again your facts are wrong. the uk want their sovereignty back which they gaVe up iN exchange for joinin the EU. Its only but fare. they are willing to pay a fait price to recover our waters and our rights. the EU don't want ti easy in the UK as they know there orher EU members watching that are considering a change. facts.
both sides are protecting themselves so a true free trade is an unlikely outcome. Fewer restrictions might be a possibility. Only time will tell. I have yet to see a trade agreement (ex within EU) which encompasses free trade for all items.
well put
There is nothing in this world as FREE Launch- brexiteers just get that into your brexit heads
Free lunch is only for cheap people lol
France, one of the founding countries is seeking to punish us for rejecting their club. The main negotiators are French and we, being a foreign nation are useful as diversionary tactic to take the heat off looking at their own internal problems. This deal could have been done quite easily along the lines of the Canadian one but their insistence to have fishing rights in our waters in perpetuity beggars belief, you can imagine how that would go down if the shoe was on the other foot.
It would be called cherry-picking.
eu can do one, 2nd word off
Brexiteers must be in a dilusion state to actually believe you get a free trade for FREE
The EU will collapse anyway. Its divided economically North to South and culturally East to West. Best to get out and get organised now
Johnson is a b€||€nd
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