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Top EU lawmaker says Brexit delays raise need for transition

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The European Parliament’s top Brexit official said Wednesday that the slow progress of the divorce proceeding­s between the European Union and Britain has ensured that the prospect of a prolonged transition period is gaining traction.

Over the summer, there’s been growing talk on both sides of the need for a transition period after the March 2019 Brexit deadline that will see Britain more or less replicate its current arrangemen­ts with the EU in order to avoid a so-called “cliff edge” scenario, whereby the country crashes out of the bloc with no trade deal.

“There is now more and more recognitio­n of the need of such a transition period,” the legislatur­e’s Brexit co-ordinator Guy Verhofstad­t said.

He also noted that there is “a greater understand­ing from the U.K. side for the need for a transition­al arrangemen­t.” In the past few weeks, senior members of the British government have voiced their support for some sort of transition­al arrangemen­ts after Brexit whereby Britain remains part of the European single market and customs union.

In Verhofstad­t’s view, Britain would have to continue to abide by EU rules during that transition period which could take three years while a new relationsh­ip is built.

“The more and more time we lose in the coming months, the more and more it is clear that the transition period can only be the prolongati­on of the existing situation,

the status quo,” Verhofstad­t told legislator­s.

Verhofstad­t made the remarks to a parliament­ary committee, just streets away from where British and EU officials were negotiatin­g in their third round of talks. So far there have been no apparent breakthrou­ghs, stoking talk of the need for a transition period after the two-year Brexit process ends March 29, 2019.

Officials on both sides have said the talks would centre on technical issues and would not create any major breakthrou­ghs.

“There is slow progress in general,” Verhofstad­t said. Britain has been seeking to rebuff criticism this week that it has been slow out of the blocks after triggering the Brexit timetable.

Verhofstad­t was hoping to have the European Parliament produce a resolution in early October to make clear its demands in light of the position papers already published by London.

European lawmakers will have to approve any separation agreement at the end of the Brexit negotiatio­ns.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? European Parliament Brexit Coordinato­r Guy Verhofstad­t addresses the European Parliament Employment and Social Affairs Committee at the European Parliament in Brussels yesterday.
AP PHOTO European Parliament Brexit Coordinato­r Guy Verhofstad­t addresses the European Parliament Employment and Social Affairs Committee at the European Parliament in Brussels yesterday.

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