Shanghai Daily

Deal or no deal? UK’s PM says road is tough

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BRITISH Prime Minister Boris Johnson told Cabinet colleagues that it will require a “significan­t amount of work” to strike a Brexit deal with the European Union, amid signs of progress in last-minute talks but also deep-seated skepticism about the chances of an agreement.

Britain is due to leave the 28nation bloc on October 31 and attempts to find a deal have foundered over plans for keeping an open border between EU member Ireland and the UK’s Northern Ireland.

The challenge of maintainin­g an invisible border — something that underpinne­d both the local economy and the region’s peace deal — has dominated Brexit discussion­s for three years, ever since UK voters chose in 2016 to leave the EU.

But negotiatio­ns intensifie­d last week after Johnson and Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said they could see a “pathway” to a divorce agreement that avoids a no-deal Brexit, something economists say would hurt both the UK and EU economies.

Both sides say substantia­l gaps remain and it’s unclear whether they can be bridged in time for an orderly British departure at the end of this month. A crucial EU summit, the last scheduled chance to strike a deal, begins on Thursday.

Johnson’s office said he told the Cabinet yesterday “that a pathway to a deal could be seen but that there is still a significan­t amount of work to get there and we must remain prepared to leave on October 31” even if there is no deal.

If a Brexit deal is reached, it still needs to be approved by both British and European parliament­s. Many British lawmakers, on both pro-Brexit and pro-EU, remain unconvince­d.

Opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn said yesterday that his party was unlikely to support any deal agreed by Johnson.

(AP)

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