The Niagara Falls Review

U.K. opens EU trade talks with threat to walk away

Britain demands right to diverge from bloc’s rules to strike new agreements

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON—Britain laid out its opening demands for upcoming trade talks with the European Union on Thursday, including a blunt threat to walk away from the negotiatin­g table if there is no progress within four months.

The two sides appear headed for a rocky first round of negotiatio­ns as they try to forge a new relationsh­ip following the U.K.’s departure from the now 27country bloc.

Britain and the EU both say they want to reach a free-trade agreement, but have starkly divergent views on how it should be overseen and what constitute­s fair competitio­n between their two economies.

The EU says Britain must agree to follow the bloc’s rules in areas ranging from state aid to environmen­tal protection­s, and give European boats access to U.K. fishing waters, if the two sides are to strike a good deal.

But the U.K. is demanding the right to diverge from the bloc’s rules in order to strike new trade agreements around the world, and to give the British government a freer hand to intervene in the U.K. economy.

“In pursuit of a deal we will not trade away our sovereignt­y,” Michael Gove, the minister in charge of Brexit preparatio­ns, told lawmakers in the House of Commons.

“We will not be seeking to dynamicall­y align with EU rules on EU terms, governed by EU laws and EU institutio­ns.”

That conflict will be one of the big hurdles in talks, which are due to begin Monday in Brussels. Fishing is likely to be another flashpoint. EU countries — especially France — want Britain to grant European boats long-term access to U.K. waters. Britain wants to negotiate fishing quotas annually.

Britain left the EU on Jan. 31 but remains bound by the bloc’s rules until a post-Brexit transition period ends on Dec. 31. A divorce agreement between the two sides allows for the transition to be extended for two more years, but British Prime Minister Boris Johnson insists he will not agree to that.

That leaves the two sides just months to seal a wide-ranging deal.

Britain’s negotiatin­g guidelines insist that there is “limited, but sufficient time” to get an agreement.

The document says a “broad outline” of an agreement should be done by June. It warns that if there is not sufficient progress by then, the U.K. could walk away and focus on “domestic preparatio­ns to exit the transition period.”

 ?? ISABEL INFANTES AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? British lawmaker Michael Gove says the U.K. will not trade away its “sovereignt­y” for a deal.
ISABEL INFANTES AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO British lawmaker Michael Gove says the U.K. will not trade away its “sovereignt­y” for a deal.

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