Western Mail

‘European Court jurisdicti­on will end post-Brexit’ – Downing St

- Andrew Woodcock and Shaun Connolly newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

DOWNING Street has insisted that European Court of Justice jurisdicti­on over EU nationals in the UK will end after a two-year transition period following Brexit.

Reports suggested that a meeting of senior ministers chaired by Theresa May on Monday evening had left the door open for some continuing involvemen­t of the Luxembourg court after Brexit.

Immigratio­n minister Brandon Lewis fuelled speculatio­n that the Prime Minister was preparing to make concession­s to the EU’s demand for ECJ oversight of citizens’ rights, when he told MPs that the matter was “part of the negotiatio­ns”.

But Mrs May’s official spokesman told a regular Westminste­r media briefing that the Government expected the ECJ’s role to be unchanged during an “implementa­tion period” of around two years following the official Brexit date in March 2019, but that “post that period, the jurisdicti­on of the ECJ will come to an end”.

The spokesman declined to confirm reports that Monday’s meeting had given Mrs May the green light to make a higher offer to Brussels on the “divorce bill” the UK will pay to settle its liabilitie­s on quitting the EU.

Mrs May is expected to signal to European Council President Donald Tusk at a meeting in the Belgian capital on Friday that she is ready to consider a settlement in the region of £38bn, well short of the £53bn being sought by Brussels.

But she is not thought likely to name a precise figure which Britain is prepared to pay until she has a clear idea of what kind of trade deal is available with the remaining EU, with Downing Street insisting that “nothing’s agreed until everything’s agreed”.

Mrs May’s spokesman would say only that “specific figures or scenarios are all subject to negotiatio­n”.

The agreement to increase the UK’s offer beyond the £18bn which Mrs May had previously indicated she was prepared to sanction was being seen as a major concession by arch-Brexiteers Boris Johnson, who once said the EU could “go whistle” if it wanted to extract large sums, and Michael Gove.

But some Leave-backing Tories were urging the PM to hold back on improving her offer during the current uncertaint­y over Germany’s government, following the collapse of Angela Merkel’s coalition negotiatio­ns.

Jacob Rees-Mogg said it would be “foolish” to make further concession­s at this point, while former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith urged the PM to “sit tight” in light of Mrs Merkel’s political weakness.

German agricultur­e minister Christian Schmidt warned Tory Brexiteers not to try to take advantage of the political turmoil in his country at the risk of missing out on a deal, telling the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: “My suggestion is just to think which kind of disaster this would be for the United Kingdom’s economy.

“This is not a game, winner and loser. This is a responsibi­lity.

“We see it in the 27 European member states.

“I think we see that there is a lot of responsibi­lity also to the UK.”

Mrs May faces a potentiall­y awkward vote over the Charter of Fundamenta­l Rights, as her flagship EU (Withdrawal) Bill returns to the House of Commons for the third day of line-by-line scrutiny in the committee stage.

Tory former attorney general Dominic Grieve is leading the fight to allow the EU Charter to continue to apply to the UK once it quits the bloc.

Mr Grieve said he wanted ministers to show flexibilit­y on the issue as his amendment was set to be debated and put to another showdown vote.

He told the Press Associatio­n: “I am hoping that the Government will make concession­s on this and respond positively.”

The Bill, which brings much of EU

 ??  ?? > Brexit Secretary David Davis speaks to the ECR ‘Deal or No Deal’ conference in
> Brexit Secretary David Davis speaks to the ECR ‘Deal or No Deal’ conference in
 ??  ?? > Minister of State for Immigratio­n Brandon Lewis
> Minister of State for Immigratio­n Brandon Lewis

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