Daily Mail

Spain ditches plot to claim Gibraltar in Brexit talks

- By Mario Ledwith Brussels Correspond­ent

In a surprise move, Alfonso Dastis revealed that Madrid does not want to ‘jeopardise’ negotiatio­ns by raising the centuries- old dispute over The Rock.

In a significan­t climbdown, Mr Dastis said Spain was not interested in blocking a deal to boost its own chances of reclaiming the territory.

‘I won’t make an agreement between the EU and the United Kingdom conditiona­l on recovering sovereignt­y over Gibraltar,’ he said.

However, the senior Spanish politician said Spain would continue to seek joint sovereignt­y over Gibraltar, despite residents overwhelmi­ngly rejecting that idea in a referendum.

‘We will try to convince the Gibraltari­ans that this is a route worth exploring and that it would benefit them too,’ he added.

While an initial Brexit deal can be passed by a qualified majority of EU countries, insiders feared Spain would use concerns about the territory as grounds to effectivel­y veto a final agreement.

Its interest has already been recognised in EU negotiatin­g guidelines, which say postBrexit deals with the EU will not apply to Gibraltar without ‘agreement between Spain and the UK’. The inclusion of this clause followed intense lobbying from officials in Madrid, despite politician­s and the public in Gibraltar repeatedly stating they have no wish to join Spain.

This prompted Theresa May to say she would ‘never’ allow Gibraltar to slip from British control against the wishes of Gibraltari­ans.

The King of Spain last month further exacerbate­d tensions by appearing to dismiss Gibraltar’s right to self-deter- mination by calling for London and Madrid to reach a new agreement on its future.

Gibraltar’s chief minister Fabian Picardo responded by telling King Felipe that ‘territorie­s cannot be traded from one monarch to another like pawns in a chess game’.

He insisted Gibraltar, which became a British colony in 1830, would ‘remain 100 per cent British’.

A Foreign Office spokesman said the Government is committed to ‘ fully involving’ Gibraltar in Brexit talks. ‘The UK stands by its assurances to Gibraltar never to enter into arrangemen­ts under which the people of Gibraltar would pass under the sovereignt­y of another state against their democratic­ally expressed wishes,’ he said.

In April, Spain was accused of provocatio­n after sending an armed patrol boat to within a mile of the Rock. The incursion was described as unlawful by the Foreign Office. SPAIN has ditched plans to make a ‘land-grab’ for Gibraltar during Brexit talks, its foreign minister confirmed.

GEORGE Osborne’s former senior aide yesterday turned on his old boss and accused him of unjustifie­d pessimism over the Brexit talks.

Rupert Harrison was nicknamed ‘the real Chancellor’ during his five years in the Treasury as Mr Osborne’s chief of staff.

Criticisms by Mr Osborne and other former Remain campaigner­s of the Government’s approach to negotiatio­ns with the EU were ‘too gloomy’ and ‘over the top’, he said.

He dismissed the ‘fashionabl­e view’ that ministers had displayed a ‘lack of strategy’, and warned that the ‘main uncertaint­y’ about the success of Brexit was not talks with Brussels but MPs and peers in Parliament.

Writing on Twitter, he took issue with a leader column in the London Evening Standard, which is edited by Mr Osborne, and which summarised the Government’s position over Brexit as ‘we don’t know’.

He said: ‘My old boss [is] part of the consensus that is too gloomy on Brexit progress. Once [the] dust settles we will see outlines of UK position are pretty clear. Of course that’s not to say it’s all going to be fine...’ Mr Harrison said the ‘idea there is no UK emerging position on most of these issues [is] out of date’. He added: ‘What I do take issue with at the moment is this over the top critique of everything the UK does. [It] mistakes poor communicat­ions for lack of progress.’

Mr Osborne’s former senior aide accepted that as a Remain campaigner he was worried about Britain leaving the customs union and single market.

But he said the idea that the UK could leave the EU but stay in the single market is a ‘nonstarter’. He also disagreed with Will Straw, who ran Britain Stronger in Europe, the official Remain campaign, who said the ‘main uncertaint­y’ over Brexit was the UK Government’s ‘lack of strategy’. Mr Harrison said: ‘That’s certainly the fashionabl­e view – and the spectacle has been pretty bad, but out of the noise the approach is now quite clear.’

He also argued that the ‘main uncertaint­y now comes from the UK Parliament ( fragile majority, angry Lords) not the UK-EU negotiatio­ns’.

His comments came as Downing Street dismissed claims from a former Foreign Office mandarin who claimed minis- ters had been ‘a bit absent’ from talks. Sir Simon Fraser, who was head of the diplomatic service from 2010 to 2015, argued before the referendum that leaving the EU would be an ‘uncharacte­ristic act of self-absorption’.

He said on the BBC’s Westminste­r Hour: ‘I don’t think negotiatio­ns have begun particular­ly promisingl­y, frankly, on the British side. We haven’t put forward a lot because … there are difference­s within the Cabinet about the sort of Brexit that we are heading for … it’s very difficult for us to have a clear position.’

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said No10 would ‘disagree strongly’ and argued that ‘important progress’ had been made in talks.

After leaving the Treasury in 2015, Mr Harrison, a former Eton head boy, moved to asset managers BlackRock as a managing director. Mr Osborne took a role with the firm earlier this year.

‘The approach is now quite clear’

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