Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

All eyes on May as she prepares to spell out key Brexit demands

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European leaders braced yesterday for a speech by British Prime Minister Theresa May that is expected to spell out key positions on Brexit after wrangling and tension in her own government.

With the clock ticking towards Britain’s departure from the EU on March 29, 2019, May’s address in Florence, Italy seeks to break a deadlock in negotiatio­ns whose fourth round starts next week.

Among the many issues dividing the two sides, money dominates.

Britain has yet to agree on -- or even say -- how much it will pay the European Union on departure, a position that for Brussels blocks any talks on a potential future trade deal.

On the eve of her speech, May met with cabinet ministers for more than two hours to finalise Britain’s position.

Ministers have been at odds over crucial issues such as a potential transition deal and future access to the EU single market as well as the Brexit bill.

The tensions exploded into public view last week when Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson laid out his own vision for life outside the EU.

He argued for a sharp break with the bloc, a stance that dismays moderates who fear this will wreck Britain’s relations with the world’s biggest trade bloc.

In doing so, he was accused of trying to tie the hands of May, whose hold on power remains fragile since losing her parliament­ary majority in the June election.

Divorce bill

Six months after May began the two-year countdown to Britain’s withdrawal, EU leaders are still waiting for details on what she wants from the divorce.

Michel Barnier, the EU’S chief negotiator, on Thursday ramped up the pressure.

“To make progress, we are waiting for clear commitment­s from the UK on these precise issues. We will listen attentivel­y and constructi­vely to Theresa May’s important speech,” he said.

Reports suggest May will include an offer on Britain’s financial obligation­s and a proposal for a two-year transition into a new deal with the EU.

Barnier said such a period would begin on March 30, 2019 but pointed to the detailed dealmaking effort needed to make it happen.

“Logically this would require existing union regulatory, budgetary, supervisor­y, judiciary and enforcemen­t instrument­s and structures to apply,” he said.

Downing Street said the speech would “also discuss a vision for a bold new economic and security partnershi­p and set out the prime minister’s plan for a time-limited implementa­tion period.”

The divorce bill will be a key issue in upcoming talks.

British media reports say May would accept a 20-billion-euro ($23.9-billion) payment during the transition in return for access to the single market.

The EU, though, is demanding Britain pay for budget commitment­s made but not yet paid, including contributi­ons for infrastruc­ture projects in poorer member states and pensions for EU officials.

May was expected to say that a deal would ensure that “when this chapter of our European history is written, it will be remembered not for the difference­s we faced, but for the vision we showed.”

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Theresa May

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