Scottish Daily Mail

EVERY CHANCE OF GETTING A DEAL!

Johnson boosts hopes of a Brexit breakthrou­gh

- From John Stevens in London and James Franey in Brussels

BORIS Johnson last night declared ‘there is every opportunit­y of a deal’ as he boosted hopes that a Brexit trade agreement will be struck with the EU.

The Prime Minister ditched his warning that No Deal is the most likely outcome as negotiator­s revealed fishing quotas are the last stumbling block.

MPs and peers will rise for the Christmas recess today, but have been told they could be recalled with as little as 48 hours notice to approve a deal if one is agreed.

Downing Street said a Commons vote could be held as soon as Monday, although officials have pencilled in the week between Christmas and New Year as more likely.

The Government has drafted plans to fasttrack the legislatio­n through Parliament in just a couple of days, including by sitting for longer hours.

The negotiatin­g teams in Brussels are now trying to find an agreement on fish quotas, while putting the final touches to a joint mechanism to deal with disputes if the UK

‘Control our laws and control our waters’

and EU in the future want to vary standards on labour, environmen­t and state subsidies.

One source close to the talks last night said: ‘ The general mood is more positive, but the whole thing could collapse on fish.’

EU officials said the teams of UK negotiator Lord Frost and his EU counterpar­t Michel Barnier have still been unable to agree on access for foreign boats to Britain’s waters. ‘I don’t have the impression that we are getting anywhere on fishing,’ said one French source.

At Prime Minister’s Questions yesterday, Mr Johnson struck a much more optimistic tone just days after he warned that it was most likely that Britain and the EU will fail to agree a trade deal.

He told MPs: ‘ There’s every opportunit­y, every hope that I have, that our friends and partners across the Channel will see sense and do a deal.

‘And all that that takes is for them to understand that the UK has a natural right like every other country to want to be able to control its own laws and its own fishing grounds.’ As he appeared at Downing Street press conference yesterday afternoon, Mr Johnson declined the opportunit­y to repeat his warning about the likelihood of No Deal.

Asked if it was still his view it was the most likely outcome, he replied: ‘Well, again, that is very much a matter for our friends, they know what the parameters are and we’ve just got to make sure that we control our laws and control our own waters.’

On a Zoom call with Tory MPs last night, Mr Johnson joked: ‘The only mandatory thing from Brussels next year will be sprouts on Christmas table because we will have left the orbit of the ECJ (European Court of Justice).’

In Brussels, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said there is a ‘path’ to an agreement, but she conceded it is ‘very narrow’.

The senior EU official indicated that it is on fishing where the two sides remain furthest apart.

‘We do not question the UK’s sovereignt­y on its own waters,’ she said. ‘But we ask for predictabi­lity and stability for our fishermen and our fisherwome­n.

‘And, in all honesty, it sometimes feels that we will not be able to resolve this question.’ German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the Eurpean Commission and the UK will keep talking ‘until the end of this week’.

Downing Street last night put parliament­arians on notice to return in haste in the event of a breakthrou­gh. ‘Parliament has long shown it can move at pace and the country would expect nothing less,’ No 10 said.

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