The Borneo Post

May hails Brexit talks ‘progress’ but no breakthrou­gh

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BRUSSELS: Prime Minister Theresa May said she had made ‘ progress’ in talks with the EU on Wednesday as she sought to extract concession­s on the terms of Britain’s divorce, but as expected there was no major breakthrou­gh.

With less than six weeks until Brexit day, May met European Commission president JeanClaude Juncker hoping for movement on the ‘Irish backstop’ issue — after EU leaders insisted they would not restart negotiatio­ns.

Fears are growing that Britain could yet crash out without a deal, and there was fresh drama just before May headed to Brussels as three of her MPs resigned from her Conservati­ve party in protest over Brexit to join a new independen­t group of lawmakers.

A joint statement from May and Juncker called their meeting ‘constructi­ve’, striking a slightly more positive tone than when the two leaders met a fortnight ago.

“The two leaders agreed that talks had been constructi­ve, and they urged their respective teams to continue to explore the options in a positive spirit,” the statement said.

Separately, May said she had stressed the need for “legally binding changes to the backstop” — though the EU has ruled this out.

“We’ve agreed that work to find a solution will continue at pace, time is of the essence and it’s in both our interests that when the UK leaves the EU it does so in an orderly way. And so we’ve made progress,” May said.

May and the other 27 EU leaders approved a Brexit withdrawal agreement at a summit on Nov 25 last year, but the British leader’s own parliament rejected it overwhelmi­ngly on Jan 15.

Since then, May and her ministers have repeatedly met EU leaders and their negotiator Michel Barnier to urge them to reopen the text to find a way to appease euroscepti­c MPs.

The main stumbling block has been the Irish backstop, which provides for Britain to remain in the EU customs union until a way is found — such as a future free trade deal — to ensure that Ireland’s border with Northern Ireland remains open.

Brexiteers in May’s own Conservati­ve party see this as a ‘trap’ to keep Britain tied to the bloc indefinite­ly, and have demanded a time limit or exit clause.

But such a clause would be seen in Brussels as a betrayal of EU member Ireland and has consistent­ly been given short shrift by EU officials.

May and Juncker’s statement indicated a fresh push to see what guarantees the EU could offer on the backstop to convince sceptical MPs it will not be used to trap Britain.

It also suggested the political declaratio­n outlining plans for future EU-UK ties could be beefed up to “increase confidence” that both sides will try to reach a future deal as soon as possible, so the backstop never has to be used.

May said her Brexit Minister Stephen Barclay and Attorney General Geoffrey Cox would be back in Brussels on Thursday — just three days since their last visit — as the pace of negotiatio­ns picks up.

A European source said Cox, whose legal analysis of May’s deal confirmed Brexiteer fears, will have a key role to play.

If Brussels does enough on the backstop to persuade Cox to soften his advice, it could help swing the parliament­ary arithmetic behind the prime minister.

Without a deal, Britain is due to leave the Union abruptly after four decades on March 29, with no follow- on agreement or transition period to manage trade and economic relations. — AFP

 ??  ?? Juncker meets with May at the European Commission headquarte­rs in Brussels, Belgium. — Reuters photo
Juncker meets with May at the European Commission headquarte­rs in Brussels, Belgium. — Reuters photo

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