Western Mail

Trade talks must wait until after EU divorce deal, warns Hollande

- Press Associatio­n reporters newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

FRENCH President Francois Hollande has told Theresa May that talks on future trade relations with the EU must come after the negotiatio­n of a divorce deal.

Mr Hollande’s stance echoed that of German Chancellor Angela Merkel as Europe presented a united front against the Prime Minister’s plea for trade and divorce talks to take place simultaneo­usly.

Failure to achieve a swift move to trade talks would threaten Mrs May’s goal of completing the negotiatio­ns by the expected date of Brexit in March 2019, and could force her to seek a transition­al deal lasting several years to prevent a disruptive “cliffedge” change in trading rules.

In a statement, the Elysée Palace said Mr Hollande spoke by phone with the Prime Minister and told her it was “necessary first to initiate discussion­s on the arrangemen­ts for withdrawal, notably relating to citizens’ rights and the obligation­s arising from commitment­s made by the United Kingdom.

“On the basis of progress being achieved on that, we would be able to open discussion­s on the issue of the future relations between the UK and the EU.”

A statement released on Wednesday by the European Council on behalf of the 27 remaining member states said Brexit talks would “start by focusing on all key arrangemen­ts for an orderly withdrawal” and did not mention a trade deal.

Brexit Secretary David Davis played down the significan­ce of the row over the sequencing of talks.

The Article 50 provision governing withdrawal states that the negotiatio­ns must “take into account” the future relationsh­ip along with the withdrawal arrangemen­ts, he said.

“The Commission has taken a different stance and said, ‘We want to deal with the departure first and the ongoing relationsh­ip second’,” Mr Davis told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. “There is an area of argument over this, an area of discussion over this, which is fine.”

And he added: “We are after a fully comprehens­ive deal that covers trade, that covers security, covers all the aspects of our existing relationsh­ip and tries to preserve as much of it – the benefits for everybody – as we can.”

Mr Davis rejected claims that Mrs May was trying to “blackmail” Brussels by linking trade and security in her letter notifying the EU of Britain’s intention to quit.

Critics accused the PM of issuing a veiled threat with her warning that “a failure to reach agreement would mean our co-operation in the fight against crime and terrorism would be weakened”.

The European Parliament’s Brexit co-ordinator, Guy Verhofstad­t, told ITV1’s Good Morning Britain: “What I think is not possible is to say to the European Union, ‘Well, look, we will only co-operate on security if you give us a good trade deal or a good economic package’. That is not done.

“The security of the citizens is so important, the fight against terrorism is so crucial, that you cannot negotiate with something else.”

And France’s ambassador to the UK, Sylvie Bermann, told Today: “We are all facing the same security challenges and we all need security. So it can’t be a trade-off between an FTA (free trade agreement), an economic agreement, and security.”

But Mr Davis said the response from EU leaders to Mrs May’s letter had generally been warm.

“Virtually all of them said spontaneou­sly it’s a very positive letter, the tone was good, and so on,” he told GMB. “Guy Verhofstad­t called it blackmail, let’s not say everybody did.”

Work and Pensions Secretary Damian Green said the row was a “misunderst­anding”.

The two issues had been mentioned side by side because they were “all bound up in our membership of the European Union”, he said.

“It’s not a threat, I think that’s the misunderst­anding,” he told BBC2’s Newsnight. “It’s absolutely not a threat.”

The next stage of the Brexit process sees plans set out to repatriate more than 40 years of powers back to Westminste­r, with the publicatio­n of details of the Great Repeal Bill.

The White Paper – Legislatin­g For The United Kingdom’s Withdrawal From The European Union – sets out how the government will deal with EU laws that cannot be easily converted.

Up to 1,000 pieces of secondary legislatio­n are expected to be used to make technical changes – nearly as many as MPs and peers usually deal with in an entire parliament.

Asked about his promise that the UK’s trade deal would provide the “exact same benefits” as membership of the single market, Mr Davis said: “I make no apology for being ambitious about what we are trying to do.”

But he acknowledg­ed that “achieving it, of course, is a matter of negotiatio­n, and negotiatio­ns are uncertain”.

Mr Verhofstad­t said the European Parliament – which has a veto on the eventual divorce deal – envisaged the Brexit process ending with an “associatio­n agreement” between the UK and the EU.

This would include both security and counter-terrorism co-operation, as well as a “fair” trade deal which ensured that Britain outside the EU did not have as favourable a status as that enjoyed by members.

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> Europe is presenting a united front
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> Francois Hollande

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