Times of Oman

‘Little chance’ of broad Brexit trade deal: EU parliament deputy chief

The centre-left SPD politician spoke after Johnson accused the EU of failing to negotiate seriously

- DW

LONDON: European Parliament Vice President Katarina Barley sees little chance for anything other than a narrow UK-EU trade deal after British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said there was no point in continuing the negotiatio­ns.

Barley, a German-British MEP, admitted to a German public broadcaste­r that talks had become “increasing­ly difficult.”

The centre-left SPD politician spoke after Johnson accused the EU of failing to negotiate seriously and warned his country to prepare to trade with the bloc based on World Trade Organizati­on rules from January when the Brexit transition period ends.

Brexit talks ‘over’

Accusing the 27-nation bloc of failing “to negotiate seriously” in recent months, Johnson said the outcome of this week’s EU leaders’ summit had ruled out a comprehens­ive, Canada-style free trade agreement.

An aide to the United Kingdon leader later ramped up the rhetoric further by adding that trade talks were over unless Brussels

“fundamenta­lly shifts its position.”

Barley noted that Johnson’s priority was to show the British people that he is in control, saying that he’s only “concerned about domestic perception” and that the EU “must be the scapegoat.”

Barley, who sat in the Bundestag from 2013 to 2019, does not believe the trade talks will be extended past the EU’s mid

November deadline.

EU leaders including German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte have said the bloc was still willing to seek compromise. European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen said the EU still wanted a deal, though “not at any price.’’

On Friday evening, an EU spokesman tweeted that chief negotiator Michel Barnier held video talks with his British counterpar­t David Frost and that negotiator­s from both sides will be in touch on Monday for further discussion­s on the “structure” of talks.

In a sign of a lack of confidence in the UK government’s position, the rating agency Moody’s cut Britain’s debt rating to “Aa3” from “Aa2,” putting the country on the same level as Belgium and the Czech Republic

Moody’s downgrades UK debt

In a sign of a lack of confidence in the UK government’s position, the rating agency Moody’s cut Britain’s debt rating to “Aa3” from “Aa2,” putting the country on the same level as Belgium and the Czech Republic.

The agency said Brexit and the huge economic hit from the coronaviru­s pandemic would likely take its toll on the world’s sixthbigge­st economy.

Moody’s said Britain’s growth had been “meaningful­ly weaker than expected and is likely to remain so in the future.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? BREXIT: EU leaders including German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte have said the bloc was still willing to seek compromise.
BREXIT: EU leaders including German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte have said the bloc was still willing to seek compromise.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman