Las Vegas Review-Journal

Brexit bill heavy on EU’S mind

European official has warning prior to May meeting

- By Jill Lawless The Associated Press

LONDON — A member of the European Parliament met Prime Minister Theresa May on Wednesday, warning that Britain needs to do more to settle the terms of its divorce from the European Union or risk talks being delayed even further.

Manfred Weber held talks with the British leader at 10 Downing St. In a video message before the meeting he said Britain needs to resolve issues including its outstandin­g financial commitment­s because “when somebody is leaving a club,” they must pay their bills.

EU leaders are frustrated with Britain’s reluctance to signal how much it is willing to pay to settle its commitment­s to the 28-nation bloc. The Brexit bill — estimated by the EU at somewhere around $70 billion — is a sticking point preventing the EU from allowing talks to move on to trade and future relations.

The 27 other EU leaders are due to decide next month whether there has been sufficient progress for talks to enter a new phase.

Weber, who heads the center-right EPP group in the European Parliament, said Tuesday that at the moment “it doesn’t look as if we are going to be entering into the second phase” next month. But after meeting May, he tweeted that he felt progress was possible and “there is a willingnes­s for compromise.”

Weber said outside Downing St. that Britain did not need to name an exact figure for its Brexit bill but must “clarify the commitment­s” it is willing to meet.

Meanwhile, May’s government battled in the House of Commons to pass its piece of Brexit legislatio­n amid opposition from pro-eu lawmakers.

The European Union (Withdrawal) Bill is designed to prevent a legal vacuum by converting some 12,000 EU laws into British statute on the day the U.K. leaves the bloc in March 2019.

But many lawmakers claim the bill gives the government too much power to amend legislatio­n without parliament­ary scrutiny. And opponents of Brexit — both from the opposition and from May’s Conservati­ve Party — are trying to amend it to soften the terms of Britain’s exit from the bloc.

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Theresa May

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