Western Mail

EU must compromise to reach a deal, insists Raab

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EUROPEAN leaders have been urged by the UK to compromise on their Brexit stance on the eve of a major summit.

Prime Minister Theresa May will use today’s gathering in Salzburg, Austria, to make a direct pitch to fellow leaders to back her divisive Chequers proposals.

Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab said it was time for the “compromise­s” made by the UK to be “matched on the EU side”.

In a sign that Brexit talks could go to the wire, the European Union is preparing for a final deal to be struck at an emergency summit in November, rather than the scheduled October meeting previously targeted by both sides in the negotiatio­ns.

The deal has to be finalised well in advance of the UK’s March 29, 2019, exit from the bloc so the parliament­s in Westminste­r and Strasbourg can sign off on the agreement.

In Brussels, the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, was briefing ministers from EU government­s yesterday on remaining issues in the divorce talks, including the Irish border, as well as the framework for the UK’s future relationsh­ip with the EU.

Arriving at the meeting, Brexit Minister Lord Callanan said: “If we are to get a deal there has to be compromise­s from both sides and we look forward to seeing what the EU side has to say about this.”

The message echoed that from Mr Raab, who set out the UK’s position in an interview with journalist­s from newspapers across the EU.

Setting out the UK’s hopes, Mr Raab said the Salzburg meeting at which Mrs May is expected to briefly set out her position over dinner tonight before her 27 counterpar­ts consider the situation in her absence tomorrow, would be “an important milestone” and “a stepping-stone” to a deal.

But he made clear the UK was looking for further movement from the EU on the Irish border.

He branded Mr Barnier’s “backstop” proposals – which would see Northern Ireland remain in the EU customs area - unworkable, because they would create a border in the Irish Sea and fail to respect the constituti­onal integrity of the UK.

“What I’m not going to do is to say that I would refuse to entertain any further proposals that the EU comes up with but they’ve got to be respecting the equities that we’ve set out,” he told correspond­ents from European newspapers.

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