The Philippine Star

EU and UK negotiator­s eye accelerate­d Brexit transition talks

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BRUSSELS (Reuters) – British Brexit negotiator­s are expected to launch fortnightl­y rounds of talks in Brussels from as early as next week with the aim of agreeing on a swift deal on a transition period, EU diplomats said on Friday.

Brexit Secretary David Davis said in a speech outlining his view of a post-Brexit transition, that was close to the status quo proposed by the EU that he expected to start talks in the coming “days and weeks.”

The EU negotiatin­g team led by Michel Barnier will, EU sources said, be ready to receive Davis and his officials for formal negotiatio­ns on what will happen after Britain leaves in March 2019 once EU ministers formally endorse Barnier’s binding instructio­ns at a meeting in Brussels on Monday.

A first meeting could be held as soon as the latter part of next week, they said.

While no schedule for those talks has been formally agreed, EU diplomats said the plan for now is to set a relatively fast pace of exchanges, meeting in Brussels every two weeks in contrast to the roughly monthly round of negotiatio­ns held in the first phase of the process last year.

Davis said that, because there was broad agreement already, he was confident of reaching an interim accord on the transition by the time EU leaders hold a Brussels summit on March 22-23.

That will not be legally binding – details of the transition will form part of a withdrawal treaty which will be agreed only by around October and legally ratified by parliament­s on both sides only in the months after that.

However, both sides hope that a joint declaratio­n on the nature of the transition in March can give businesses and people some more certainty to make decisions about their future.

The EU has proposed that Britain effectivel­y remain in all of its existing structures, including the single market and customs union, until the end of 2020 while losing its say on EU policy. Prime Minister Theresa May appears ready to accept that, assuring disappoint­ed Brexit supporters who say it will turn Britain into a “vassal state” that it is just for a short time.

Negotiatio­ns are likely to focus on the complexiti­es of that status quo, including giving Britain a non-voting seat at some EU meetings, how to determine current matters like annual fishing quotas and how the EU might allow London to sign up to new trade deals with other countries while bound by EU accords.

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