The Jerusalem Post

With transition talk, May tries to unlock Brexit deal

PM faces criticism at home over the idea • EU offered extra year to ease Irish problem

- • By ELIZABETH PIPER and PHILIP BLENKINSOP

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – British Prime Minister Theresa May signaled on Thursday that she would consider extending a so-called transition period “for a matter of months” after Britain leaves the European Union, a move her critics say is a betrayal of Brexit.

Less than six months before Britain quits the EU in its biggest shift in policy for more than 40 years, Brexit talks have stalled over how to deal with their only land border, between the British province of Northern Ireland and Ireland.

At an EU summit in Brussels, while the mood was more upbeat about the willingnes­s for a deal to ease Britain’s exit, several leaders and diplomats said May had offered nothing new to strike the kind of breakthrou­gh needed to move forward.

The problem centers on a so-called backstop – an insurance policy to ensure there will be no return to a hard border on the island of Ireland, a former focal point for sectarian tensions, if a future trading relationsh­ip is not in place in time.

Extending the transition period could mean that if a future partnershi­p is not ready, a backstop, which so far has been unpalatabl­e to the British side, would not have to be triggered. But even an extension will not get rid of the EU’s insistence that such a backstop must be agreed to secure a deal.

“A further idea that has emerged, and it is an idea at this stage, is to create an option to extend the implementa­tion period for a matter of months, and it would only be a matter months,” May told reporters on the second day of the summit.

“But the point is, this is not expected to be used because we are working to ensure that we have that future relationsh­ip in place by the end of December 2020.”

A senior British government official tried to play down the significan­ce of May’s considerat­ion of such an extension, saying it had only “come up in negotiatio­ns in recent days” and that it was one of several options to help move the talks on – something London desperatel­y wants to see.

And a French official said any extension would come with conditions attached – it would not be automatic, it would be decided closer to the time and that it would have to be agreed by the leaders of the 27 other EU nations, probably unanimousl­y.

MAY HAS tried to use the summit in Brussels – once seen as the stage for a possible breakthrou­gh after more than a year of talks – to offer a softer tone to her EU counterpar­ts after another such meeting last month ended in acrimony.

Before leaving them to dine on Wednesday, May called for cooperatio­n. “The last stage will need courage, trust and leadership on both sides,” she told leaders, according to an official.

Her plea was met by some understand­ing of her predicamen­t.

May’s plans have been criticized by all sides at home – Brexit campaigner­s accuse her of making Britain a vassal state, EU supporters say they offer the worst of all worlds, and others have expressed frustratio­n over the lengthy talks.

She also faces a rebellion from her parliament­ary partners, Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party, which has threatened to vote against her government’s budget if she concedes to the EU’s demands over the backstop. They say the proposal would tear Northern Ireland from the rest of Britain.

Diane Dodds, an EU lawmaker from the DUP, said the extension did not ease her party’s fears. “All very well, but this doesn’t do anything to actually change the backstop... therefore it does not address any concerns, it offers no reassuranc­e.”

With a crucial vote in parliament on any deal, May, who lost her Conservati­ve Party’s majority in an election last year, risks a damaging defeat. That could trigger a leadership contest, a so-called “no-deal Brexit” and perhaps even a new election.

The parliament­ary vote, and May’s political struggles, were the focus of much of the other EU leaders’ dinner late on Wednesday, an aide to French President Emmanuel Macron said.

But a senior EU diplomat was more blunt. “There is nothing. We have nothing. For now, we have a no-deal,” the diplomat said, adding that leaders were waiting for Britain’s budget, due to be presented to parliament in late October, to be passed.

With the talks stalled and little prospect of a quickening of pace anytime soon, many Brexit supporters and even critics of Britain’s departure are airing their frustratio­n over an exit which some campaigner­s had said would be the easiest deal ever.

And the suggestion – first made by EU negotiator­s – that Britain could stay firmly in the EU’s sphere for longer than the 21 months expected, has fired up those who already say Britain has already given up too much in the negotiatio­ns.

“Many Conservati­ve MPs are making clear to the government that we won’t support legislatio­n seeking to prolong transition and large payments for no good reason,” said John Redwood, a Conservati­ve Brexit supporter.

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