Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.K. says trade talks over; EU holds out hope

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Raf Casert, Samuel Petrequin and Geir Moulson of The Associated Press.

LONDON — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Friday that the United Kingdom must prepare for a nodeal break with the European Union unless there is a “fundamenta­l” change of position from the bloc, as the two sides swapped blame for failing to strike a trade deal with just weeks until the end-of-year deadline.

The EU said it was ready to continue negotiatin­g, but Britain declared the talks as good as dead.

“The trade talks are over,”

Johnson spokesman James Slack said. “The EU have effectivel­y ended them yesterday,” he said, by stating at a summit in Brussels that the U.K. would have to significan­tly change position or there would be no deal. The summit ended Friday.

EU leaders including

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said the bloc was still willing to seek compromise, and European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen said the EU still wanted a deal — though “not at any price.” Von der Leyen announced that EU negotiator Michel Barnier would head to London next week “to intensify these negotiatio­ns.”

Downing Street appeared to rebuff that offer.

“There is only any point in Michel Barnier coming to London next week if he is prepared [to] discuss all the issues on the basis of legal texts in an accelerate­d way without the U.K. being required to make all of the moves,” Slack said.

The EU said it saw several more weeks of detailed talks ahead that would by their very nature have to deal with legal wording, and said both sides would have to budge.

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