Otago Daily Times

May rejects customs union compromise

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LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May has rejected the idea of targeting a customs union with the European Union, pouring cold water on hopes from some that she could shift her Brexit policy to win over the opposition Labour Party.

Britain is due to leave the EU on March 29 but has yet to find a deal which is acceptable to both Brussels and lawmakers at home, raising the prospect of a disorderly exit that could damage the world’s fifthlarge­st economy.

Brexit has divided Britain at every level from voters to cabinet, and raised fears internatio­nally that it will weaken the West. Brexit supporters hail it as casting off a failing Germanled project.

Last week, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn set out the conditions under which he would instruct his party to support an exit deal in Parliament. Foremost was a demand that May seek a ‘‘permanent and comprehens­ive UKwide customs union’’.

The EU has urged May to grasp Labour’s compromise offer rather than press ahead with her preferred option of getting her own divided party onside by renegotiat­ing a clause in the exit agreement relating to the Northern Irish border.

But May’s office published her reply to Corbyn late on Sunday, showing little appetite for a Uturn which would risk splitting her fractious party by ruling out the scope for Britain to strike its own trade deals around the world.

May and her Government have repeatedly said membership of a customs union would prevent it having an independen­t trade policy — something they have promoted as one of the main economic benefits of leaving the EU. — Reuters

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