The Scotsman

Sinn Fein coming to Number 10

● Gerry Adams to tell PM she can’t broker power-sharing talks ● Cameron says Davidson is new force in Brexit warning

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS Westminste­r Correspond­ent

the word, spirit and implementa­tion of the Good Friday Agreement if there is to be any prospect of re-establishi­ng the executive.”

She added that “progress will not come from a deal between the DUP and Tories to prop up a government in Westminste­r with an austerity and Brexit agenda”.

Talks with the DUP to reach a confidence and supply deal securing the support of their ten MPS broke up on Tuesday night without an agreement, but Mrs May said the discussion­s had been “productive”.

Aseniorcon­servatives­ource told journalist­s: “We are making a lot of progress. It’s all being done in the spirit of cooperatio­n, with a real focus on strengthen­ing the union and providing stability at this time.”

DUP leader Arlene Foster, who travelled to Westminste­r for talks with the Tories on Tuesday, said she hoped a deal could be reached “sooner rather than later”.

The BBC reported DUP sources who said the talks were going well but it was thought “inappropri­ate” to make an announceme­nt while events were unfolding at the Grenfell Tower in west London.

A Conservati­ve source said there was so far no deal to announce and that a decision on the timing of any announceme­nt would have to wait until an agreement was finalised.

Labour shadow business secretary Rebecca Long-bailey said the prospect of a Conservati­ve-dup deal was “worrying”, telling BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “It would create a lot of instabilit­y in terms of the peace process in Northern Ireland.”

Meanwhile, Mrs May came under further pressure to change her approach to leaving the European Union, with predecesso­r David Cameron among those suggesting a softer stance with a greater effort to seek a consensus.

Brexit talks are set to start in Brussels on Monday. The former prime minister said Mrsmaywoul­dhavetocha­nge her approach to Brexit as a result of the election, warning: “It’s going to be difficult.”

At a conference in Poland, Mr Cameron urged the Prime Minister to “consult more widely with the other parties” on how to achieve Brexit, echoing calls from other senior figures in the Conservati­ve Party including Scottish leader Ruth Davidson.

“There’s no doubt that there is a new player on the stage,” Mr Cameron said of Ms Davidson’s stance. “Scotland voted against Brexit. I think most of the Scottish Conservati­ves will want to see perhaps some changes with the policy going forward.”

Mr Cameron added that he thought there would be “pressure for a softer Brexit” and thatparlia­mentnow“deserves a say” on the issue.

At a joint press conference with Mrs May in Paris on Tuesday night, French president Emmanuel Macron suggested that the door was still open for the UK to remain within the European Union if it changed its mind.

“Until the negotiatio­ns come to an end, of course there is always the possibilit­y to re-open the door,” said the French president.

But the European Parliament’s Brexit co-ordinator Guy Verhofstad­t said the UK could not expect the conditions of its membership to remain the same if it took this path. Speaking in Strasbourg, he said the £5 billion a year EU budget rebate negotiated by Margaret Thatcher in 1984 could be up for grabs if Britain decides to stay. “Yesterday Emmanuel Macron... said if Britain is changing its mind, it will find an open door,” said Mr Verhofstad­t. “I don’t disagree with him. But like Alice In Wonderland, not all doors are the same. It will be a brand new door with a new Europe.”

0 Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams alongside party members at

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