The Phnom Penh Post

UK firms appeal for Brexit deal as PM warns of likely failure

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UK BUSINESSES clamoured for compromise on December 13 as Prime Minister Boris Johnson said failure remains the “most likely” outcome to marathon post-Brexit trade talks with the EU.

“I’m afraid we’re still very far apart on some key things, but where there’s life there’s hope,” Johnson told reporters, after agreeing with EU commission chief Ursula von der Leyen to push on with negotiatio­ns.

The pair had said they would decide whether or not a deal was possible by the end of the weekend, but agreed in a phone call to “go the extra mile” before the UK leaves the EU’s single market on December 31.

“The UK certainly won’t be walking away from the talks. I still think there’s a deal to be done if our partners want to do it,” Johnson said at 10 Downing Street after briefing his cabinet about the call.

But Britain could not compromise on the “fundamenta­l nature” of Brexit, controllin­g UK laws and fisheries, he said.

“The most likely t hing now is of course we have to get ready for WTO terms,” Johnson added, referring to tariffs and quotas on t he basic rules of t rade set by t he World Trade Organisati­on.

He said: “There is a clarity and a simplicity in that approach that has its own advantages. It’s not where we wanted to get to . . . but the UK is prepared.

“Either way, whatever happens, the UK will do very, very well.”

UK businesses welcomed the agreement to keep talking, but disagreed strongly with Johnson’s cheerful forecasts for Britain’s future if it severs all ties with its biggest overall trading partner from the New Year.

Society of Motor Manufactur­ers and Traders CEO Mike Hawes tweeted: “We now need negotiator­s to finish the job and agree the deal we all so desperatel­y need.

“’No deal’ would be nothing less than catastroph­ic for the automotive sector, its workers and their families, and represent a stunning failure of statecraft. Quite simply, it has to be ruled out.”

Nissan has warned that a no-deal Brexit would make its Sunderland car factory in northeast England, which employs more than 6,000 workers, unviable due to the restoratio­n of tariffs on cross-Channel trade.

Last week, Japanese automaker Honda suspended production at its British plant for a day after suffering a shortfall in parts, owing to blockages at ports caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic and Brexit stockpilin­g.

Even with a trade deal, Britain will still be out of the EU’s common market and businesses will face new customs regulation­s and paperwork.

They warn the government has failed to get vital informatio­n technology (IT ) systems ready in time, leading to fears of transport gridlock on roads and at ports.

Confederat­ion of British Industry director-general Tony Danker said the news of talks continuing “gives hope”, but demanded the government fix the IT rollout and offer more support to businesses.

He said in a statement: “A deal is both essential and possible. It is the only way to build upon the extensive support for the economy given by all government­s during the pandemic. Without it, that progress is undermined.”

The British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) appealed to London and Brussels not to give up.

BCC director-general Adam Marshall tweeted: “Even at this unbelievab­ly late hour, the message from business to UK and EU leaders is still the same. Keep going. Get a deal done.”

But Johnson is under pressure from pro-Brexit hardliners in his Conservati­ve party not to back down.

Tory member of Parliament John Redwood said: “A long complex legal agreement that locks the UK back into many features of the EU that hinder us is not the Christmas present the UK needs.”

 ?? AFP ?? The UK will leave the EU’s single market on December 31.
AFP The UK will leave the EU’s single market on December 31.

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