May and Tusk meet as U.K. and EU differ on Irish border, trade
Britain urged the European Union to be constructive and the EU told the U.K. to get realistic, as the divorcing partners differed Thursday over the Irish border and their postBrexit economic relationship.
Conservative British Prime Minister Theresa May met European Council President Donald Tusk at 10 Downing St. in London, a day before the British leader makes a speech she said will outline “our proposals for the future economic partnership” with the EU.
In a statement after her meeting with Tusk, May’s office said she “hoped that European leaders would engage with this thinking constructively.”
Downing Street characterized the meeting as “positive and constructive.”
But Tusk and other top EU officials have expressed increasing frustration with Britain’s stance, which many in the bloc see as vague and unrealistic. Tusk said as the meeting started that he was “not happy” with May’s negotiating “red lines,” which include leaving the EU’s single market and customs union.
The U.K. is due to leave the EU in March 2019, but the two sides have yet to negotiate new arrangements for trade, security, aviation and a host of other fields.
Chief EU negotiator Michel Barnier said Thursday that British officials should stop pretending “that the U.K. could obtain a free trade deal with the EU with all the benefits of the single market without the obligations.”
“Abandoning such ideas will enable us to begin building an ambitious future partnership based on the foundation of realism,” he told a business gathering in Brussels.
British aims have been left vague so far — more than 18 months after the country voted to leave the EU — because May’s Conservative government is divided. Some ministers want a clean break with the EU, while others hope to retain close economic alignment with the bloc to cushion the shock of Brexit.
British ambiguity collided this week with the hard problem of the border between Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic, which will be the only land frontier between the U.K. and the EU after Brexit.