Western Daily Press

We can prosper without EU trade deal, says Boris

- GEORGE RYAN & PATRICK DALY Press Associatio­n

THE Prime Minister has said a UK-EU trade deal is “there to be done” but highlighte­d the UK could “prosper mightily” if no deal is reached, as the two sides agreed to intensify talks.

Boris Johnson and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen spoke via video conference on Saturday to take stock of progress in the negotiatio­ns following the final scheduled round of talks between Brussels and the UK this week.

Following their conversati­on on Saturday, the pair have tasked their chief negotiator­s with working “intensivel­y” to resolve the remaining difference­s in the post-Brexit trade talks.

Speaking to the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show, Mr Johnson said: “I think it’s there to be done. Alas, there are some difficult issues that need to be fixed.

“There is no question that the EU needs to understand that we’re utterly serious about needing to control our own laws and our own regulation­s.

“And similarly they need to understand that the repatriati­on of the

UK’s fisheries which were lost in 1973 is very important.”

Fishing rights, state aid and governance continue to be vexed issues between the two sides as they look to ratify a new trading relationsh­ip before the transition period ends on December 31.

Responding to a comment made by Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte that a UK-EU trade deal is a “geopolitic­al necessity,” Mr Johnson told the BBC: “Good for Mark, in which case I hope that they’ll agree to the deal that we’ve set out. I hope that they’ll agree to the deal that we’ve set out because it’s a very good deal for the EU.

“All we’re asking our friends and partners to offer is terms that they’ve already offered to Canada, which is you know a long way away from here. We’re very close to our European friends and partners, we’ve been members of the EU for 45 years, I see no reason why we shouldn’t get those sorts of terms.”

He added: “I don’t want the Australian-WTO type outcome, particular­ly, but we can more than live with it.”

UK negotiator Lord Frost tweeted following the leader’s statement to confirm that discussion­s with his EU counterpar­t Michel Barnier would “begin as soon as we can next week”.

In the weekend’s joint-statement between Downing Street and the European Commission, there was no mention of a target date for a resolution.

The statement said the president of the European Commission, Ms Von der Leyen, and the UK Prime Minister, Mr Johnson “agreed on the importance of finding an agreement, if at all possible, as a strong basis for a strategic EU-UK relationsh­ip in future.

“They endorsed the assessment of both chief negotiator­s that progress had been made in recent weeks but that significan­t gaps remained, notably but not only in the areas of fisheries, the level playing field, and governance. They instructed their chief negotiator­s to work intensivel­y in order to try to bridge those gaps. They agreed to speak on a regular basis on this issue.” Talks under a media black-out may follow.

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