The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Brexit deal failure may threaten rare species breeding programmes

Claim that economy will fall off a ‘cliff edge’ if no deal is in place in time

- SAM LISTER

Theresa May has been accused of backing away from a key Brexit promise after she appeared to concede that a trade deal with the EU cannot be signed until after the UK leaves.

Opponents of a hard Brexit called on the Prime Minister to ensure that a transition­al agreement was in place to avoid the risk of disruption to business if the UK makes a “cliff edge” departure from the EU without a trade deal.

Speaking during a visit to Jordan, Mrs May said she expected the shape of a new trade relationsh­ip to be clear to everybody by Brexit Day in March 2019, but appeared to accept that the formal conclusion of the agreement will have to wait until after withdrawal.

European Council president Donald Tusk left no doubt in his draft guidelines for negotiatio­ns, released on Friday, that EU rules state that trade deals can only be done with non-members, so that the most the UK can hope for prior to Brexit is an “overall understand­ing on the framework for the future relationsh­ip”.

Mrs May insisted it will be possible to reach clarity on the deal within two years.

But asked if the deal could be finalised in that timescale, she told Sky News: “There’s obviously a legal situation in terms of how the EU can conduct trade negotiatio­ns.

“I’m clear that by the point at which we leave the EU, it’s right that everybody should know what the future arrangemen­ts, the future relationsh­ip, that future partnershi­p between us and the European Union will be.

“That’s the sensible thing, it’s the pragmatic way to look at this, and I believe that’s what we will do.”

Labour said that Mrs May’s comments amounted to a “significan­t retreat” from the Government’s previous position that a trade deal could be done within the two-year deadline for withdrawal negotiatio­ns set down in Article 50 of the EU treaties.

The party’s Brexit spokesman, Paul Blomfield, said: “It is less than a week since the Prime Minister triggered Article 50, and it seems every day brings another broken promise from the Government.

“First they said immigratio­n may go up after Brexit. Now they are backpedall­ing on trade deals.

“We will hold the Government to account on the pledges made to the British people during the referendum campaign and since. They promised a comprehens­ive free trade agreement, with the EU giving the ‘exact same benefits’ we have now. They said it would be ready for the day we leave, along with new trade deals with other countries.

“Now, as they face reality, they are trying to downplay expectatio­ns. They need to spell out the transition­al deal that will be in place, to stop the economy falling off a cliff edge without new agreements in two years’ time.”

The influentia­l House of Commons Exiting the EU Committee has called on Mrs May to commission an assessment of the cost of leaving the EU without a trade deal, in a report which said her claim that this scenario would be “better than a bad deal” was “unsubstant­iated”.

Responding to the report – which was repudiated by six pro-Brexit members of the committee – Mrs May told Sky: “As I said in the Article 50 letter, I set out what would be a ‘no deal’ situation, but I also said that I don’t think that’s in anybody’s interests. We will be working to get the best possible deal in the British national interest.”

 ?? Picture: Getty. ?? Prime Minister Theresa May meets with Jordanian King Abdullah II bin Al-Hussein in Jordan.
Picture: Getty. Prime Minister Theresa May meets with Jordanian King Abdullah II bin Al-Hussein in Jordan.

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