Daily Mail

Will France give way in Brexit fishing row?

- By Claire Ellicott and James Franey

FRANCE is gearing up to compromise on EU access to British fishing waters, a French minister hinted yesterday.

In a boost to the UK’s Brexit deal hopes, French minister for European affairs Clement Beaune warned his country’s fishermen they could not expect to enjoy the same rights after the transition period.

The close ally of President Emmanuel Macron told radio station France Info: ‘If we told our fishermen that we had drasticall­y reduced their access to the British waters – on which they depend for their economic survival – they would say that is indecent and they would be right.

‘However, after Brexit, it will not be as it was before.

‘But we will defend, tooth and nail, the interests of our fishermen, our farmers, our businesses and our citizens in general and we will not accept a bad deal.’

Mr Beaune’s comments represent a significan­t climbdown from Mr Macron’s hardline position on fishing quotas, which has prevented progress in the Brexit negotiatio­ns over the summer. They follow a phone call between Boris Johnson and Mr Macron on Saturday in which the Prime Minister warned that Britain would walk away unless the French leader softened his stance on the issue.

Mr Johnson yesterday spoke to Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor, to reiterate that the UK desired a deal but was prepared to accept No Deal if an agreement was not reached.

He emphasised that progress must be made in the coming days to bridge the significan­t gaps on fisheries and the ‘level playing field’ for business rules and standards. A Downing Street spokesman said: ‘The Prime Minister stressed that while achieving a deal in the coming days would be beneficial for both sides, the UK was also prepared to end the transition period on Australia- style terms if a deal was not possible.’

Senior UK Government sources said the EU needed to give ground in time for a two- day Brussels summit starting on Thursday ‘or else’. Mr Johnson had set this Thursday as the final deadline for a possible accord. It is thought that leaders will decide whether to press ahead with talks, or ramp up No Deal planning.

Just two weeks ago, French diplomatic sources were saying that anything less than ‘the same level of access’ for fishermen was ‘inconceiva­ble’ and ‘unacceptab­le’.

France is a leading member of the ‘coastal eight’ group which is demanding the same access to British waters as before Brexit.

Last week, Michel Barnier, the EU’s chief negotiator, told European ambassador­s that coastal states needed to be more ‘realistic’ over fishing.

One senior EU diplomat admitted: ‘The fish happens to be in UK waters and there isn’t a lot that we can do about it.’

Mr Beaune said France would not accept ‘a deal at any price’ and accused Britain of using negotiatin­g tactics that amounted to ‘provocatio­n’ in recent weeks.

‘We stayed calm because we must not let ourselves be intimidate­d in this negotiatio­n,’ he said. ‘We must not let ourselves be diverted from our goal.’

Some British officials think Mr Macron might prefer to blame the UK for the failure of negotiatio­ns rather than force his fishermen to accept reduced quotas.

‘There isn’t a lot we can do about it’

IS it finally dawning on France that its demand for newly independen­t Britain to surrender full control of our fishing waters on leaving the EU is patently absurd?

hinting at a climbdown, one of President emmanuel Macron’s ministeria­l allies has told French trawlermen they can’t expect the same rights following Brexit as they’ve enjoyed since the 1970s.

If this is a breakthrou­gh on the biggest obstacle to a deal, bravo. But significan­t sticking points remain. no sovereign nation could agree to be tied to european courts and laws.

Mr Johnson has threatened to pull the plug on talks on Thursday if the EU refuses to budge.

But a costly no Deal, particular­ly in the midst of a crippling pandemic, would be needlessly damaging. All involved must strain every sinew to reach an accord.

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