The Scotsman

EU hands Britain a two-month deadline on Brexit talks

● Pressure mounts for decision on exit bill, Northern Ireland and citizens’ rights

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS in Brussels

British and EU negotiator­s are in a race against time to reach agreement on contentiou­s Brexit issues including a multi-billion pound financial settlement, EU citizens’ rights and the Northern Irish border by October in order to leave time for vital trade talks.

As the first substantiv­e negotiatio­ns in Brussels got under way yesterday, EU sources warned that the window for progress to be made was as little as two months to find compromise­s on crucial issues before the future economic relationsh­ip with the UK is discussed.

The UK government accepted EU demands that agreement is reached on three priorities of rights, money and Northern Ireland before any discussion­s are held on a crucial deal covering more than £550 billion worth of trade between the UK and EU.

European leaders have earmarked a European summit on 20 October for the leaders of 27 member states to review progress and decide whether negotiatio­ns can move to the next stage.

Ratificati­on of the final Brexit deal by parliament­s in 27 countries is expected to start in October 2018, leaving just a year to agree the outline of a trade deal and transition­al arrangemen­ts to stop UK businesses falling off a Brexit “cliff edge”.

Week-long rounds of talks will be held in Brussels every four weeks until a final deadline under the formal Article 50 exit process on 29 March 2019.

Additional negotiatio­n sessions could be slotted in between now and October if more work is needed to close the gap between the two sides, The Scotsman understand­s.

There was a new sense of urgency from the UK Brexit Secretary David Davis as he made a flying visit to Brussels to meet his opposite number Michel Barnier and get talks under way.

“For us it is incredibly important that we now make good progress, that we negotiate through this and identify the difference­s so that we can deal with them, and identify the similariti­es so we can reinforce them,” he said at the European Commission headquarte­rs. It’s time to get down to work and make this a successful negotiatio­n.”

Mr Barnier said that talks would “now delve into the heart of the matter”, after a one-day initial session

in June. “We need to examine and compare our respective positions in order to make good progress.”

The two men met one-onone for 15 minutes before being joined by lead negotiator­s for almost an hour to plan the week ahead. Mr Davis then returned to London ahead of a knife-edge vote in the House of Commons.

Negotiatio­ns will be carried out by a 98-strong UK negotiatio­n team, which outnumbers the EU’S Brexit task force of 45 by more than two to one.

Discussion­s are taking place in working groups covering finance, citizens’ rights, and separation issues, while sensitive discussion­s starting today on Northern Ireland will be handled personally by Olly Robbins, the permanent secretary at the Department for Exiting the EU, and Sabine Weyand, the deputy chief EU negotiator.

A press conference is expected at the close of the current negotiatio­n round on Thursday, although the UK officials indicated that was dependent on the amount of progress that is made.

Despite calls from Mr Barnier for the UK to make clear its position on payments to the EU, talks on a Brexit financial settlement began without a detailed UK paper on the issue.

Unofficial claims from the EU side of a bill between £60£100 billion have been dismissed by the UK government. Last week Boris Johnson said the EU could “go whistle” for what he called an “exorbitant” sum. EU officials are reported to be under pressure not to discuss a firm figure until an accepted formula is agreed. UK negotiator­s are expected to spend this week going through the EU’S financial settlement position paper to query its methodolog­y line-by-line.

The document lists 65 EU agencies and programmes where the UK has outstandin­g funding commitment­s under European law.

On citizens’ rights, negotiator­s must find a way to bridge a red line for both sides over the legal protection­s for EU nationals after Brexit. The UK government insists that the Courts of Justice of the EU can no longer have any jurisdicti­on in the UK after Brexit, barring for a time-limited transition period, while the EU says it is the only body that can defend those rights.

Yesterday the Scottish Government called for clarity over the UK’S proposals on EU nationals living in the UK.

Ministers have published a response to the UK government’s plan, with Scottish Government Brexit minister Michael Russell saying a number of “essential issues” remain uncertain.

UK ministers have proposed that EU nationals resident in the UK will be able to apply for “settled status”, effectivel­y guaranteei­ng them indefinite leave to remain in the country once Britain is out of the EU.

Any EU citizen who has been living in the UK continuous­ly for five years will be eligible, while those who have been resident for less than five years will be also be allowed to stay to build up to five years.

Ministers have yet to confirm the cut-off date for qualificat­ion.

Thescottis­hgovernmen­t said there are a number of important questions over “settled status”, including who will qualify, what rights they will be entitled to, the rules for family members and the costs of applying.

Mr Russell said: “As negotiatio­ns get under way again today in Brussels, it is important that this issue be concluded as soon as possible.

“Were Scotland part of the negotiatin­g team, as we have suggested, we would be doing our best to help the UK resolve the matter and any thoughts we offer are given in that spirit.

“It is of course disappoint­ing that it has taken the UK government a year to set out their plans but with good will on both sides the issues could be settled in the next few days.

“This issue is also of course about protecting the existing rights of Scots and other UK citizens living in other EU countries.”

 ??  ?? 0 Brexit Minister David Davis, left, with Michel Barnier
0 Brexit Minister David Davis, left, with Michel Barnier

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