Cape Times

May denies ‘climbdown’ from Brexit plan

New customs deal has to be reached beyond 2020

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PRIME Minister Theresa May said yesterday Britain would leave the EU customs union after Brexit but a source said London was considerin­g applying the bloc’s external tariffs for a period beyond December 2020.

Asked about reports that London would ask to stay in the EU’s customs area beyond the end of a postBrexit transition period in 2020, May denied she was “climbing down” on plans to leave.

“No. The United Kingdom will be leaving the customs union as we’re leaving the European Union. Of course, we will be negotiatin­g future customs arrangemen­ts with the European Union and I’ve set three objectives,” May said at an EU summit in the Bulgarian capital of Sofia.

She added that the objectives were that Britain should have its own trade policy with the rest of the world, should have frictionle­ss trade with the EU and that there be no “hard border” with EU member Ireland.

But the source, familiar with the discussion­s in London, said aligning Britain with EU import tariffs for an extended period could be part of a backstop arrangemen­t in the event of a delay in the implementa­tion of any Brexit deal.

The source said on condition of anonymity that the government was trying to find a way to make the backstop arrangemen­t with the EU more acceptable to Britain, rather than seeking an extension of a transition period.

May has been struggling to unite her cabinet over the terms of Britain’s divorce with the EU, with a row over future customs arrangemen­t dividing her government and all but stalling Brexit negotiatio­ns.

EU leaders meeting May in Sofia yesterday were “in listening mode” and hoping for reassuranc­es from her, said one official, before a formal summit in June when the sides want to mark another milestone in the negotiatio­ns.

That is needed to seal a final divorce deal in October, leaving the EU enough time to ratify it by Brexit day in March 2019.

Britain otherwise risks crashing out of the bloc, a scenario that could hurt the economy and disrupt people’s lives.

The EU says this schedule is coming under pressure as there has not been enough progress in the negotiatio­ns in recent months, most importantl­y on how to avoid physical controls on the border between the Irish Republic and the British province of Northern Ireland.

“It is an absolute red line for us that there could not be a hard border on Ireland,” Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said in Sofia.

If no better ideas emerge, the bloc wants the backstop clause under which it would go on regulating trade in Northern Ireland after Brexit to prevent a hard border. Both sides fear a return of border controls could reignite the violence that afflicted Northern Ireland until a peace deal in the late 1990s.

“We have a text which is the Irish backstop… and we need that to be part of the withdrawal agreement.

“And if it is not part of the withdrawal agreement, then there will be no withdrawal agreement,” Varadkar said.

Under such a scenario, Britain would not be given the adaptation period from next March to the end of 2020, but go straight into being out of the EU with little detail agreed on how to handle its ties with the bloc.

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