Daily Express

THE DEAL IS DONE!

THEY SAID HE DIDN’T WANT IT. THEY SAID HE COULDN’T DELIVER IT. BUT AFTER MONTHS OF TORTUOUS TALKS, THE PRIME MINISTER HAS AGREED A 2,000- PAGE HISTORIC TRADE ACCORD BETWEEN BRITAIN AND THE EU

- By Macer Hall Political Editor

BRITAIN is heading for a golden new era after Boris Johnson yesterday agreed a trade deal with the EU.

More than four years on from the referendum vote to break free from Brussels, the Prime Minister clinched an agreement for zero- tariff trade to continue between the UK and the bloc from the end of the post- Brexit transition period next week. Officials were still checking the fine details of the treaty text yesterday but formal confirmati­on of the deal is expected early today.

A 2,000- page draft treaty setting out

the future trade and security relationsh­ip between Britain and the EU is ready to be unveiled.

Mr Johnson’s extraordin­ary diplomatic achievemen­t follows years of political rancour and 10 months of often deadlocked trade talks.

The news comes just seven days before the country’s transition out of the EU’s single market and customs union ends.

Parliament is expected to be recalled from its Christmas break within days for MPs and peers to approve the treaty in time for the end of the post- Brexit period.

EU diplomats are understood to be in talks to ensure the deal will legally come into effect from 11pm – midnight in Brussels – on December 31.

This is despite claims from MEPs that the European Parliament will be unable to ratify the treaty by the end of the year because of the lack of time.

The pound soared on global money markets yesterday afternoon as rumours of the deal spread. On a day of high drama in Brussels, Mr Johnson’s chief Brexit envoy Lord Frost held face to face talks with senior Eurocrat Stephanie Riso at the European Commission’s Berlaymont HQ site yesterday.

As the two sides closed in on an agreement, one Government source said: “We’re on the brink of a deal. Lord Frost is in Brussels ironing out the final details.

“There was some last minute haggling over fish but we are on course for a zero- tariff trade deal that has no role for the European Court and lets us take back control of our borders and our laws and so on.”

Sources said the two sides are close to agreeing a deal on fishing that would mean a five- year transition period.

Government sources say the transition will begin with the UK entitled to keep half of the catch in coastal waters, rising to twothirds by the end of the period.

British sources said the five- year transition out

of Brussels fisheries rules would allow time for the Government to invest in rebuilding the country’s fishing industry. Euroscepti­c Tory MPs are today poised to set up a panel of experts led by the veteran anti- Brussels MP Sir Bill Cash to scrutinise the fine print of the treaty.

A statement from Mark Francois and David Jones, the chairman and vice- chairman of the European Research Group of Brexiteer Tories, said: “Assuming a deal between the UK and the EU is

officially confirmed, the ERG will reconvene the panel of legal experts, chaired by Sir Bill Cash, to examine the details and legal text.”

Senior Tory backbenche­r Bernard Jenkin said: “Amid the expectatio­n of an EU- UK agreement, ERG MPs will want to wait until we have seen a legal text and we understand what it means, if our opinion is to have any credibilit­y.”

Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage yesterday suspected the deal would emerge to be a “sell- out” for the UK fishing industry.

He said: “It sounds like the British team have dropped the ball before the line.

“No wonder they want a

Christmas Eve announceme­nt to hide the fisheries sell- out.” Other Brexit campaigner­s appealed to fellow Euroscepti­cs not to rush to judgement too hastily before the full details have been revealed.

Baroness Stuart, a former Labour minister who was a leading figure in the Vote Leave campaign in the 2016 referendum, said: “Any deal emerging from the long and tough negotiatio­ns deserves rational and calm considerat­ion rather than rushing to a judgement.

“For some it will never be enough while others regard anything with leaving EU as too much.”

Mr Johnson and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen were expected to formally agree the UK- EU trade deal early today.

They held a series of telephone calls in recent days in a last- ditch scramble to clinch the agreement before the end of the post- Brexit transition period.

The final trade discussion­s concentrat­ed on access to UK waters for European fishing fleets.

The issue had been one of the key sticking points throughout the trade wrangle.

Commission chiefs are expected to submit a draft treaty text to the European Parliament and the heads of the 27 EU member countries as early as today.

EU government­s will have two days to examine and approve the draft under a procedure laid out by Brussels officials to rush through the ratificati­on process.

French officials claimed that the EU had won “huge concession­s” from Britain on fishing as details of the final compromise were circulated to coastal states.

But their bragging infuriated other EU diplomats, who feared premature spinning could poison the atmosphere just as the talks were concluding. British sources dismissed the briefings out of Paris as posturing.

French President Emmanuel Macron has been demanding close to unchanged access to the UK’s coastal zone, where French boats net many of their catches. His Europe minister Clement Beaune said France would have pulled the plug on the negotiatio­ns but for the destructiv­e impact a no- deal Brexit would have on its fishing industry. Diplomats and officials have now worked through the night preparing for EU states to sign off on the Brexit trade deal.

EU ambassador­s are poised to meet this morning to decide whether the bloc should support the proposals for the future relationsh­ip pact.

If the deal receives a green light, Brussels will offer to “provisiona­lly apply” the treaty to ensure it can enter into force at the end of Britain’s transition out of the EU on January 1.

Member nations and MEPs will then be made to complete the ratificati­on process early in the new year.

EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier has told colleagues the post- Brexit deal will pave the way for a “new generation of free- trade agreement”.

ALL those doomster and gloomster Remainers are wrong again. They said Boris Johnson could not get a deal and if he did, he would have to cave in to EU demands. The news that a deal which is acceptable to Britain has been done is a great triumph and historic moment which should usher in a golden new era.

After four and a half years the wrangling is finally over.

At the very least we will have the grounds for continuing to work on a legal basis with the EU while issues like a so- called border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK have been put to bed.

The lengthy negotiatio­ns have proven once and for all that the British people were right to vote to Leave with the ill- will shown by Brussels and leading European politician­s, particular­ly France’s President Emmanuel Macron.

Their contempt for democracy has been damaging for the EU’s reputation and will lead to other Leave movements.

But, Mr Johnson and his chief negotiator Lord Frost have excelled. They were willing to stand up to the Brussels bullies and defend our interests.

Many Express readers and other Brexiteers will have hoped for a no- deal, understand­ably saying a plague on the EU’s houses after its behaviour. We would certainly have prospered in those circumstan­ces.

But a deal which will allow trade to continue unabated and tariff- free is in the end the best long- term solution. Also no- deal would have just left the issue unresolved and allowed a Remainer to come in the future and really sell out to the EU.

However, there now needs to be time for Mr Johnson’s deal to be properly scrutinise­d in Parliament. But as long as he has secured British sovereignt­y, enabled us to strike separate trade relationsh­ips with the rest of the world and make our own laws, and not given away too many of our fishing rights, it should pass muster.

In the meantime, Britain can now build on the superb work by Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liz Truss with 58 deals with other countries in less than two years, and look to the rest of the world with higher economic growth for our future.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? We did it… Boris Johnson has struck an 11th- hour deal with Ursula von der Leyen, top right, and Michel Barnier
We did it… Boris Johnson has struck an 11th- hour deal with Ursula von der Leyen, top right, and Michel Barnier
 ??  ?? ‘ Sell out’... Mr Farage
‘ Sell out’... Mr Farage
 ??  ?? Sir Bill Cash will study text
Sir Bill Cash will study text
 ?? Pictures: GETTY ??
Pictures: GETTY

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