The Scotsman

You won’t be an equal, UK warned as pressure to reach a deal grows

● May told she must get her Cabinet in line as clock ticks down to no-deal exit

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS Westminste­r Correspond­ent

0 Belgium’s prime minister Charles Michel gives Theresa May a Belgium football strip ahead of his team taking on and beating England in the World Cup last night Theresa May was given a harsh welcome on arrival at an EU summit in Brussels, with a warning that the relationsh­ip between the UK and Europe “isn’t going to be one of absolute equals”.

The UK was taken to task by EU leaders for its failure to agree a unified position on post-brexit trade amid continued disagreeme­nt within Mrs May’s cabinet.

Little progress is expected to emerge from talks that were set to last late into the night. The Prime Minister was scheduled to leave Brussels on Thursday. A ‘Brexit breakfast’ is planned for this morning involving the leaders of the 27 EU member states.

The Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said that Ireland was ready to begin preparatio­ns for a no-deal Brexit along its land and sea border with the UK, with time running out to secure a negotiated deal.

“Any relationsh­ip that exists in the future between the EU and the UK: we’re 27 member states, the UK is one country, we’re 500 million people, the UK is 60 million,” Mr Varadkar told journalist­s on arrival in Brussels.

“That basic fact has to be realised.”

The EU Commission President Jean-claude Juncker told journalist­s: “I don’t have to lecture Mrs May but I would like our British friends to make clear their positions… we can’t go on with a split cabinet - they have to say what they want”.

The Taoiseach added: “If we have a no-deal Brexit, and that is unlikely but possible, then the UK will essentiall­y crash out of the customs union and the single market, will not be able to trade freely any more with any part of the EU including access to a European market of 500 million people.

“That would require us to make preparatio­ns in our ports and airports for that kind of scenario and that is the kind of thing that we will be doing.”

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said the Irish border had to be the “first, second and third priority” in the Brexit negotiatio­ns and the UK needed a permanent border backstop plan.

A backstop option, agreed in principle between the EU and UK, has been interprete­d by Europe to mean Northern Ireland will stay in the bloc’s Customs Union if no other deal is reached.

The British government is adamant it will not accept any proposal which draws a distinctio­n between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK.

A white paper on future trade and customs proposals is expected in the next fortnight, after a cabinet awayday at Chequers next week to break the deadlock.

Liberal Democrat Brexit spokesman Tom Brake said: “At this point in negotiatio­ns all parties expected considerab­leprogress.timeisrunn­ing out.”

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