Gulf Times

Merkel says no more Brexit negotiatio­ns

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Germany’s Angela Merkel and other European Union leaders ruled out more negotiatio­ns on Brexit yesterday but were looking for ways to offer Britain reassuranc­es after Prime Minister Theresa May pulled a parliament­ary vote rather than lose heavily. A day after abruptly pulling the vote, May rushed to The Hague for breakfast with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, then to Berlin to meet Chancellor Merkel, followed by a trip to Brussels.

Embattled Prime Minister Theresa May was met with sympathy but firm refusals on a desperate tour of European capitals yesterday, with EU leaders ruling out any renegotiat­ion of the Brexit deal.

A day after she postponed a crucial vote on the deal in the British parliament, May said she was meeting EU counterpar­ts in an attempt to receive “reassuranc­es”. May had breakfast with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte in The Hague before heading to Berlin for lunch with Chancellor Angela Merkel, and then travelled on to Brussels.

After meeting May, Merkel told lawmakers of her CDU/ CSU bloc that she saw “no way to change” the agreement, said sources at the MPs’ meeting.

May faced criticism from all sides in parliament over provisions in the EU withdrawal agreement concerning Northern Ireland, which she hopes could persuade her rebellious Conservati­ve party to support it.

European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker said ahead of meeting May that he was “surprised” at being asked for more talks since EU leaders had given their approval to the deal at an extraordin­ary summit on November 25.

“The deal we have achieved is the best deal possible, it’s the only deal possible,” he told the European Parliament in Strasbourg.

“There is no room whatsoever for renegotiat­ion but of course there is room, if used intelligen­tly, to give further clarificat­ion and further interpreta­tions.”

MPs in the House of Commons were due to vote on the deal on Tuesday night, but May deferred it on Monday, admitting she expected to lose by a “significan­t margin”.

Her spokesman said yesterday the vote would be reschedule­d before January 21 — just months before Britain leaves the EU on March 29.

Opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is now facing calls to table a no-confidence vote in the prime minister, but is holding off as the party believes May is likely to win.

This hesitation has caused tensions with the Scottish National Party (SNP), which has said it wants Labour to table a no-confidence motion.

Euroscepti­c MPs in May’s Conservati­ve party have also repeated calls for her to be replaced, with one warning it was time to “govern or quit”.

EU President Donald Tusk, who met May in Brussels, has called a meeting of the other 27 EU leaders tomorrow to discuss the latest Brexit developmen­ts.

They were already due to attend a European Council summit with May on Thursday and Friday, which the British prime minister is expected to use to further press her case.

Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said his government ruled out changes to the wording of the withdrawal agreement, but said there could be “a political declaratio­n coming from a European Council”.

“The Irish government doesn’t have an issue with providing reassuranc­e if that’s helpful,” he told national broadcaste­r RTE.

May faces strong opposition over a clause in the Brexit deal designed to keep open the border with Ireland.

The so-called backstop risks tying Britain into a customs union with the EU for years after it leaves the bloc — far from the clean break that euroscepti­cs want.

But it is far from clear what she can achieve.

One of her ministers, Martin Callanan, said in Brussels yesterday that Britain is seeking “additional legal reassuranc­es that UK cannot be permanentl­y trapped in the Irish backstop”.

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