Kuwait Times

UK’s Gove says EU trade deal can be done

-

LONDON: Senior British government minister Michael Gove said on Sunday there was a post-Brexit trade deal to be done with the European Union providing the bloc agreed to compromise, days after both sides said talks were making little progress. The United Kingdom left the EU on Jan. 31 but the main terms of its membership remain in place for a transition period until the end of this year to allow it time to negotiate a free trade agreement.

Both Britain’s and the EU’s chief negotiator­s on Friday gave downbeat assessment­s of the latest round of talks, saying the other side had to give ground if any progress was to be made. The stalemate has raised the prospect that there will be no deal struck, a scenario that would damage global trade as the world copes with the economic fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic. On Friday, investors’ concerns about the state of the trade negotiatio­ns pushed sterling to its lowest level in more than a month.

The main sticking point in the talks has been so-called “level playing field” rules to ensure fair competitio­n. The EU says they are indispensa­ble to ensure Britain does not undercut its standards, but Britain rejects them as binding it to European laws.

Gove, the British Cabinet Office Minister, said this and issues such as future fishing rights remained sticking points. “We’re making it clear to the EU we can’t do a deal on those terms,” he told Sky News. “But I am confident that there is a deal to be done. It just requires a degree of flexibilit­y on the EU side which I’m sure that they will appreciate they need to show.” However, in a demonstrat­ion of the hurdles ahead, Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney - who played a key role in Britain’s EU exit talks due to the border Ireland shares with the British province of Northern Ireland - said Britain had to move on the level playing field issue to break the deadlock.

He told Irish national broadcaste­r RTE on Sunday that Britain was “essentiall­y rewriting” what it had committed to in the political declaratio­n of the Brexit deal. “Until the UK changes its approach in the context of giving the EU assurance that they are not going to effectivel­y deregulate their economy while expecting free access in the EU single market, I think we’re going to continue to be in real difficulty in these talks,” he added. Britain’s Mail on Sunday newspaper reported that the government was preparing to walk away altogether if no progress was made at the next round of talks due to begin in 15 days’ time and if the EU did not shift.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait