Kuwait Times

Round Four: UK and EU back in the Brexit ring

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BRUSSELS: Trade negotiator­s from Britain and the EU embark on a fourth round of post-Brexit negotiatio­ns Tuesday but no-one in London or Brussels expects a breakthrou­gh. Instead, once the latest cross-Channel video conference­s are over, Prime Minister Boris Johnson and EU chief Ursula von der Leyen will meet to decide how to proceed. A “highlevel” June meeting to take stock of the talks was already foreseen in the political declaratio­n signed by both parties alongside the divorce accord. But it may take on more urgency now, as talks between EU negotiator Michel Barnier and his UK counterpar­t David Frost have revealed stark difference­s in approach.

Deadly pandemic

Britain is not now expected to ask for any extension to the post-Brexit transition and so is on track to leave the single market and EU customs union on December 31. If no trade deal is in place by then, experts predict severe disruption to businesses already reeling from a coronaviru­s pandemic that no-one expected when Britain voted to leave the union in June 2016. Barnier, the Brussels veteran and former French minister tasked by the remaining 27 EU members with negotiatin­g an orderly Brexit, said last week that the talks would be telling.

“I expect that I will find out whether the United Kingdom wants to leave the single market at the end of this year with an agreement or without one,” he told German radio. Later, he told British weekly The Sunday Times that he and Frost have a “joint responsibi­lity” to head off disaster. “If we don’t get an agreement then that will have even more consequenc­es. And then of course those will be added to the already very serious consequenc­es of the coronaviru­s crisis,” he said. But despite the urgency of the matter, there is still profound disagreeme­nt in how London and Brussels want to approach the search for new arrangemen­ts to oversee trade and cooperatio­n. Barnier has been given a mandate to seek an ambitious overarchin­g agreement to oversee a socalled “level playing field” in manufactur­ing, labor and environmen­tal standards. This would give British firms access to most - but not all - of the benefits of the single market, without exposing their European rivals to attempts to undercut standards. — AFP

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