The Niagara Falls Review

Johnson presses EU as no-deal Brexit looms

Business groups, Scotland warn of risks, including long-term recession in U.K.

- JILL LAWLESS AND DANICA KIRKA

LONDON — Prime Minister Boris Johnson pushed Britain closer to a no-deal exit from the European Union on Monday, insisting he will not hold Brexit talks with EU leaders unless the bloc lifts its refusal to reopen the existing divorce deal.

Johnson is trying to pressure the EU to give ground by intensifyi­ng preparatio­ns for the U.K. to leave in three months without a withdrawal agreement.

But the pound fell to a two-year low as business groups warned that neither Britain nor the EU is ready for a no-deal Brexit, and that no amount of preparatio­n can eliminate the economic damage if Britain crashes out of the 28-nation trading bloc without agreement on the terms.

Johnson became prime minister last week after winning a Conservati­ve Party leadership contest by promising the strongly pro-Brexit party membership that the U.K. will leave the EU on the scheduled date of Oct. 31, with or without a divorce deal.

The EU struck a withdrawal agreement with Johnson’s predecesso­r, Theresa May, but it was rejected three times by Britain’s Parliament. Johnson is insisting the bloc make major changes to May’s spurned deal, including scrapping an insurance policy for the Irish border that has been rejected by U.K. lawmakers.

“The withdrawal agreement is dead, it’s got to go,” Johnson said Monday as he visited a submarine base in Scotland. “But there is scope to do a new deal.”

Before he took office, Johnson said the odds of Britain leaving the EU without a deal were a million to one.

The Confederat­ion of British Industry, the country’s biggest business lobby group, urged both Britain and the EU to accelerate Brexit preparatio­ns. It made 200 recommenda­tions, including new laws, new IT systems and agreements to temporaril­y maintain some common regulation­s.

But it said “the unpreceden­ted nature of Brexit means some aspects cannot be mitigated.” French automaker PSA said it could move production of its Vauxhall Astra model out of Britain if Brexit makes it unprofitab­le.

Johnson, contradict­ing the opinion of most experts, has said leaving without a divorce deal will be “vanishingl­y inexpensiv­e” if Britain is properly prepared.

He says he will “turbocharg­e” plans for a no-deal Brexit — including beefed-up border measures and a multimilli­onpound informatio­n campaign for individual­s and businesses — and has set up a bodies including a high-level Cabinet “exit strategy committee” to oversee preparatio­ns.

However, he faces strong resistance from Parliament, which has consistent­ly opposed a no-deal Brexit.

Johnson has made ambitious domestic policy promises, including more money for police and schools, and infrastruc­ture projects including high-speed trains.

But independen­t think-tank the Institute for Government said in a report that the effects of a no-deal Brexit would consume much of the government’s energy for years, pushing out other issues and sucking up large sums of money.

“Rather than ‘turbocharg­ing’ the economy, as Johnson has suggested, the government is more likely to be occupied with providing money and support to businesses and industries that have not prepared or are worst affected by a no-deal Brexit,” it said.

Johnson’s hard line may be popular with Conservati­ve Party members, but it is strongly opposed by pro-EU Britons, including some members of his own party.

The new prime minister met Monday with Scottish Conservati­ve leader Ruth Davidson, who says she won’t support leaving the EU without an agreement.

While the U.K. as a whole voted to leave the EU in 2016, Scotland backed remaining by a large margin.

Johnson was booed by pro-EU and proindepen­dence demonstrat­ors as he arrived for a meeting with Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon in Edinburgh.

Sturgeon says Scotland should hold a vote on independen­ce from the U.K. if it is dragged out of the EU against its will and that Johnson had “set the U.K. on an almost-inevitable path to a no-deal Brexit.”

“And I think that is extremely dangerous for Scotland, indeed for the whole of the U.K.,” she said.

 ?? SIMON DAWSON BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s hard line on Brexit is strongly opposed by pro-EU Britons, including some members of his own party.
SIMON DAWSON BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s hard line on Brexit is strongly opposed by pro-EU Britons, including some members of his own party.

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