EU to toughen Brexit stance on Britain, the ‘gangster’
The EU will harden its position on Brexit trade talks after London said it would only pay its divorce bill if it got a deal, leading European parliamentarians said on Tuesday.
Guy Verhofstadt, the European Parliament’s Brexit coordinator, said EU leaders meeting for a summit this week would now insist on the divorce terms being legally binding, AFP reported.
He condemned as “unacceptable” comments by Britain’s Brexit Minister David Davis in which he said a deal struck to seal separation arrangements and open talks on future relations was a “statement of intent” rather than “legally enforceable.”
“I have seen a hardening of the position of the council [EU leaders], and there will be a hardening position of the parliament,” which will vote on a Brexit motion on Wednesday, Verhofstadt told reporters at the parliament in Strasbourg, France.
“It’s clear that the European Council will be more strict now in saying... we want that these commitments are translated into legal texts before we make progress in the second phase.”
Verhofstadt added that Davis’s comments were his “own goal” that was “undermining the trust that is necessary in such negotiations.”
The European Parliament was now adding two amendments to the resolution on which it will vote on Wednesday, dealing with Davis’s comments.
The EU negotiating guidelines that national leaders are set to adopt in Brussels on Friday will meanwhile say phase two talks can only start once the divorce commitments are “translated faithfully in legal terms,” according to a draft.
The EU leaders will also say that talks on trade will not start until March, to give the British government time to provide “further clarity” on what it wants from the future relationship.
Philippe Lamberts, the Green group’s representative in the European Parliament’s Brexit steering group, said Britain’s attitude now would hurt its attempts to reach post-brexit trade deals