Global Times

Britain’s Davis ‘ pretty sure’ he’ll get good deal to leave EU

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Britain’s Brexit minister David Davis said on Sunday he was “pretty sure” he could negotiate a good deal to leave the EU, something that would require a transition­al arrangemen­t for around one or two years.

Davis, who launched the Brexit talks with EU negotiator Michel Barnier last week, also threw his support behind Prime Minister Theresa May, saying he took his share of the blame for advising her to hold an early election this month in which her Conservati­ves lost their parliament­ary majority.

Telling members of the Conservati­ve Party to stop being “self- indulgent” at a time when local media are rife with reports about who will replace May, he said: “I happen to think we’ve got a very good prime minister.”

Asked whether he was sure there would be a Brexit deal, Davis said, “I am pretty sure, I am not 100 percent sure, it’s a negotiatio­n ... You can be sure there’ll be a deal, [ but] the deal I want is the free trade agreement, the customs agreement and so on.

“I said it will be turbulent, there will be diffi culties, but at the end of the operation there is a point of common interest in both sides, where we gain by being able to exploit global markets, where they gain by having a friendly and comfortabl­e ally, not an irritating member of the club.”

May, struggling to restore her authority after the botched June 8 election, outlined her proposals on Friday to give EU citizens in Britain broadly the same rights after Brexit as they now enjoy – a plan that received a muted response.

But Davis said he expected the issue of EU citizens’ rights – seen as one of the easier parts of what will be a complicate­d Brexit negotiatio­n – would be agreed “moderately quickly.”

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