Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Deadlock as Boris insists EU must scrap the backstop

- DAVID HUGHES Press Associatio­n

EUROPEAN opposition is mounting to Boris Johnson’s plan to negotiate a new Brexit deal before the October 31 deadline.

The Prime Minister has made clear that the deal thrashed out by Brussels with Theresa May is dead and that he will take the UK out of the EU on Halloween with or without a new agreement.

But Ireland claimed he had put the UK on a “collision course” with the EU, while France stressed that the existing deal would not be renegotiat­ed.

Mr Johnson spoke to French President Emmanuel Macron to set out his position, insisting that the Northern Ireland backstop will have to go if there is to be a new Brexit deal between Britain and the EU.

Downing Street said the two leaders spoke by telephone for the first time since Mr Johnson took office as Prime Minister.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said Mr Johnson had delivered the same message as when he spoke to European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker on Thursday – that Mrs May’s Brexit deal would not get through Parliament.

“The purpose of the call was to congratula­te the Prime Minister. They did discuss Brexit,” the spokesman said.

“When the Prime Minister has these conversati­ons with fellow leaders and the discussion moves on to Brexit, he will be setting out the same message which he delivered in the House of Commons yesterday.

“He wants to do a deal. He will be energetic in trying to seek that deal, but the Withdrawal Agreement has been rejected three times by the House of Commons. It is not going to pass.

“That means reopening the Withdrawal Agreement and securing the abolition of the backstop.”

The Elysee Palace said Mr Macron and Mr Johnson will “speak about Brexit in the coming weeks, in compliance with the requiremen­ts of the European Union”. The French President has invited him to visit Paris in the coming weeks.

The Prime Minister also spoke to Angela Merkel about Brexit and the UK-Germany relationsh­ip, with the German Chancellor inviting him to Berlin.

French Europe Minister Amelie de Montchalin stressed Paris’s opposition to renegotiat­ing the deal.

“We have to be very clear on that,” she told France 2. “We’ve always said that if the UK wants to leave the EU, and if it wants to do it in an orderly manner, the best thing we have is the agreement.”

Irish deputy prime minister Simon Coveney said Mr Johnson’s comments in the Commons on Thursday setting out his Brexit plans were “very unhelpful”. “He seems to have made a deliberate­d decision to set Britain on a collision course with the European Union and with Ireland,” he said.

 ?? Virginia Mayo ?? > European Commission President JeanClaude Juncker arrives for a meeting of the college of commission­ers in Brussels
Virginia Mayo > European Commission President JeanClaude Juncker arrives for a meeting of the college of commission­ers in Brussels

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