Las Vegas Review-Journal

U.K. Brexit chief says talks may go down to wire

- By Jill Lawless The Associated Press

LONDON — Brexit negotiatio­ns between Britain and the European Union may not end until the last moment before the U.K. officially leaves the bloc in March 2019, Britain’s minister for leaving the EU said Wednesday.

The comments by Brexit Secretary David Davis drew an angry reaction from British lawmakers, who have been promised a vote on any deal struck between Britain and the bloc on their divorce.

Davis suggested that if a deal is made at the last minute, such a vote might come after Britain has already left the EU.

“Well, it can’t come before we have the deal,” he told a Parliament’s Exiting the EU Committee.

He said the EU tends to make decisions “at the 59th minute of the 11th hour of the 11th day and so on, and that is precisely what I would expect to happen.”

The EU has said in practice the negotiatio­ns will have to be finished months sooner, by the fall of 2018, to give the European Parliament and the bloc’s 27 national parliament­s enough time to approve it by March 2019.

Britain’s Department for Exiting the European Union later appeared to contradict Davis, saying Britain hoped to reach agreement on a deal “in good time” and was aiming for October 2018.

“Once the deal is agreed, we will meet our long-standing commitment to a vote in both Houses (of Parliament) and we expect and intend this to be before the vote in the European Parliament and therefore before we leave,” the department said in a statement.

Conservati­ve Prime Minister Theresa May also reassured lawmakers, saying she was confident “that we will be able to achieve that agreement and that negotiatio­n in time for this Parliament to have the vote that we committed to.”

The U.K. is keen to start talking about future relations.

 ??  ?? David Davis
David Davis

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States