The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Show courage and trust, PM urges EU at Brussels talks

Barnier says more time needed for a deal

- BY ANDREW WOODCOCK

Theresa May has told EU leaders that “courage, trust and leadership” will be needed on both sides to achieve a Brexit deal. Speaking to leaders of the 27 remaining EU states in Brussels, Mrs May said she remains “confident” that a good outcome can be reached to negotiatio­ns which stalled last weekend over the intractabl­e issue of the Irish border.

But Mrs May did not come forward with the new “concrete proposals” on the border issue which European Council president Donald Tusk has said are needed to break the deadlock.

EU leaders made clear they were expecting no breakthrou­gh at the European Council summit, which had long been billed as the “moment of truth” when agreement was needed to allow time for ratificati­on before Brexit day in March.

The EU’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier said that “much more time” was needed to bridge difference­s between the two sides, and promised to “continue the work in the next weeks calmly and patiently”.

A number of EU leaders voiced their willingnes­s to work for an orderly UK withdrawal. But several also noted that their countries were beginning preparatio­ns for a possible no-deal

Brexit.

In her 20-minute address, Mrs May stressed that significan­t progress had been made in many areas of the negotiatio­ns and urged them to find a “creative” way out of the current dilemma.

“We have shown we can do difficult deals together constructi­vely,” the PM said. “I remain confident of a good outcome.”

And she told them: “The last stage will need courage, trust and leadership on both sides.”

Following her comments, Mrs May left for a fish dinner at the UK ambassador’s residence, leaving the EU leaders to discuss Brexit in her absence over a dinner of pan-fried mushrooms, turbot cooked in wheat beer and a trio of fig, pear and grape sorbets.

Arriving in Brussels, Mrs May insisted there had been “very good progress” since Salzburg, but acknowledg­ed that difference­s remain over the key issue of the “backstop” arrangemen­t.

She said: “I believe a deal is achievable and now is the time to make it happen.”

Mrs May held separate talks with French president Emmanuel Macron, Irish prime minister Leo Varadkar and European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker, as well as Mr Tusk, in what British officials characteri­sed as “constructi­ve and serious conversati­ons”.

“We have shown we can do difficult deals together”

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