Jamaica Gleaner

May pins hopes on new Brexit plan as businesses fret

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BRITISH PRIME Minister Theresa May’s office disclosed details Thursday of a plan for customs ties with the European Union that she hopes will unite warring proBrexit and pro-EU factions of her Conservati­ve government.

Whether it will get the approval of the bloc is another matter.

May’s Cabinet is due to meet Friday at Chequers, the prime minister’s country retreat, in hopes of finally agreeing on a plan for future trade ties that Britain can put to the EU. With just nine months to go until the United Kingdom leaves the bloc in March, EU leaders have warned Britain that they must present detailed plans soon or risk crashing out without a trade deal.

That prospect alarms manufactur­ers and other businesses, who warn they could abandon Britain if the EU and the UK cannot strike a deal.

Carmaker Jaguar Land Rover warned Thursday it would reconsider £80 billion (US$106 billion) of investment in the UK if the government failed to negotiate a deal that protects free trade with the EU.

“We urgently need greater certainty to continue to invest heavily in the UK and safeguard our suppliers, customers, and 40,000 British-based employees,” Chief Executive Ralf Speth said.

His comments follow similar warnings from BMW and Airbus.

May’s Cabinet is split between pro-EU ministers, including Treasury chief Philip Hammond, who want to retain close economic ties with the bloc and its market of 500 million people, and pro-Brexit lawmakers such as Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, who want a clean break so Britain can strike new trade deals around the world.

A powerful group of pro-Brexit Conservati­ve lawmakers have warned May she could be toppled by her own party if she opts for a compromise Brexit that keeps Britain closely aligned to EU rules.

One of the thorniest issues concerns the border between Britain’s Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland — the UK’s only land frontier with an EU member. Britain has promised to maintain an invisible border, free of customs posts and other infrastruc­ture. EU officials are impatient to hear detailed proposals from Britain for how that can be achieved, given May’s insistence that Britain will leave the EU’s customs union.

The proposal May will present to Cabinet on Friday — dubbed a “facilitate­d customs arrangemen­t” — calls for the UK to use technology at its borders to determine whether goods are bound for Britain or the EU, and charge the appropriat­e tariffs. It would also commit Britain to keeping its regulation­s closely aligned to those of the EU.

 ?? AP ?? Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Theresa May.
AP Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Theresa May.

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