The Sunday Telegraph

EU prevaricat­ion over trade deal ‘will hit smooth Brexit progress’

- By Ben Riley-Smith ASSISTANT POLITICAL EDITOR

THE European Union is damaging the chances of a smooth Brexit by refusing to talk about a future free trade deal, British ministers have claimed.

In a warning shot to Brussels, senior Whitehall sources have told The Sunday Telegraph that the Continent will be to blame for trade disruption unless they agree to widen talks.

Ministers want the EU to sign off discussion­s about a free trade deal in October even if there is no agreement on the size of the so-called “Brexit bill”.

David Davis has gone public with his concerns over timings, indicating the two-step negotiatio­ns process demanded by Brussels could backfire.

“With the clock ticking, it wouldn’t be in either of our interests to run aspects of the negotiatio­ns twice,” the Brexit Secretary said yesterday.

The comments mark an escalation in the timings row that is likely to dominate the coming months as Brexit negotiatio­ns become more advanced.

The UK government will be publishing a series of position papers on Brexit for the second week in a row after an active summer across Whitehall.

Five papers will come out this week covering goods and services, confidenti­al documents, civil judicial co-operation, dispute resolution and data protection.

The publicatio­ns – which focus on the technical detail of how Brexit will work – will be discussed at another round of talks at the end of the month.

However, they are currently being overshadow­ed by a bigger row about the EU’s refusal to discuss the future trading relationsh­ip after Brexit. The EU is insisting there must be “sufficient progress” on three topics – EU citizens’ rights, the amount Britain will pay and Northern Ireland – before a free trade deal is discussed.

However, Whitehall sources believe they will soon have ticked that box and believe further delay would damage the chances of an orderly break.

There is particular concern that genuine progress cannot be made without detailed talks about what terms the EU and UK will be trading after Brexit.

A senior Whitehall source said: “The Government is getting us into a position where it will become obvious that if there’s a problem when we leave with

‘It will become obvious that if there’s a problem when we leave with trade, the EU will have created it, not the UK’

trade, it will be the EU who created it, not the UK. The decision has got to be taken about talking about the future relationsh­ip at the October EU Council.

“The sensible thing to do is talk about it as soon as possible. It’s obvious some aspects of the Ireland issues can’t be solved until you’re talking about how trade will work across the border.”

Mr Davis said: “The five new papers [are] all part of our work to drive the talks forward, and make sure we can show beyond doubt that we have made sufficient progress on withdrawal issues by October so that we can move on to discuss our future relationsh­ip.”

Britain is due to formally leave the EU on March 29 2019, though a transition period of up to three years after that will see the changes phased in.

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