Miami Herald

Brexit trade talks suspended due to COVID-19 case

- BY RAF CASERT AND JILL LAWLESS

As if the Brexit trade negotiatio­ns were not tortuous enough, the coronaviru­s added a twist at a crucial stage on Thursday when top-level talks had to be suspended because an EU negotiator tested positive for COVID-19.

It added uncertaint­y to the negotiatio­ns as a deadline looms ever closer and both sides are still divided on three key issues.

EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier said that together with his U.K. counterpar­t, David Frost, “we have decided to suspend the negotiatio­ns at our level for a short period.”

Talks among lowerranki­ng officials will continue in the meantime. And once the top negotiator­s can resume meeting faceto-face, the talks should be back in London.

Any long suspension of talks will make it even tougher for the negotiator­s to clinch a deal ahead of

Jan. 1, when the existing trade agreements between the EU and Britain expire.

“This can cause some delays but these negotiatio­ns have been a succession of delays. So this should not scare us off,” said Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte after the issue had been briefly discussed at an EU video summit.

With face-to-face talks off the table, “the UK and EU teams have agreed to continue to negotiate remotely for the time being. The talks will resume in person when it is judged safe to do so,” Downing Street said.

The virus, which has been brutal for people across the EU and U.K., did not spare the negotiatio­ns over the past nine months. Barnier tested positive in March and Frost self-isolated that same month after developing coronaviru­s symptoms. U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson was hospitaliz­ed in April and is currently back in coronaviru­s quarantine until next Thursday.

It appears the situation was relatively under control since the U.K. side said none of their negotiator­s needed to self-isolate that members of the team would be traveling back to Britain as they usually do.

“When it is deemed safe, we expect talks to resume in London,” Downing

Street said.

Time is running out as the EU will need about four weeks to complete the approval process of any deal that is agreed upon.

Only on Wednesday a top European Union official said that trade talks with the United Kingdom still face “substantia­l work” that might spill over into next week.

The U.K. left the EU on Jan. 31, but a transition period when EU rules apply to trade and other issues runs until the end of December. Both sides had hoped to get a trade deal by then to protect hundreds of thousands of jobs and businesses that could suffer if Brexit leads to a sharp end to existing trade relations.

If there is no deal, businesses on both sides of the English Channel will face tariffs and other barriers to trade starting on Jan. 1.

That would hurt economies on both sides, with the impact falling most heavily on the U.K., whose economy is already reeling under the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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