Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hope wanes amid Brexit talks

Negotiatin­g sides pass deadline but aim to ‘go the extra mile’

- By Raf Casert and Jill Lawless

BRUSSELS — Teetering on the brink of a no-deal Brexit departure, Britain and the European Union stepped back from the void Sunday and agreed to continue trade talks, although both downplayed the chances of success.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen ditched a self-imposed deadline and promised to “go the extra mile” to clinch a post-brexit trade agreement that would avert New Year’s chaos and costs for cross-border commerce.

“Where there’s life, there’s hope,” said Johnson, offering little else as rationale to keep on with talks that have struggled to make headway for most of the year and need to be finished before Jan. 1, when the transition period for Britain, which left the EU last January, ends.

With hundreds of thousands of jobs and tens of billions in trade at stake, von der Leyen said after her phone call with Johnson that “we both think it is responsibl­e at this point in time to go the extra mile.”

All this, she added, “despite the exhaustion after almost a year of negotiatio­ns and despite the fact that deadlines have been missed over and over.”

U.K. and EU negotiator­s were still talking at EU headquarte­rs on Sunday, with less than three weeks to go until the U.K. leaves the economic embrace of the 27-nation bloc.

But their leaders failed to present visible progress on any of the outstandin­g issues of fair-competitio­n rules, mechanisms for resolving future disputes and fishing rights.

Johnson said the “most likely” outcome was that the sides wouldn’t reach a deal and would trade on World Trade Organizati­on terms, with the tariffs and barriers that would bring.

European Council President Charles Michel warned there could not be a deal “at any price, no. What we want is a good deal, a deal that respects these principles of economic fair play.”

It was unclear how much of the gap between the sides is negotiatin­g tactics and how much reflects difference­s that make a deal unlikely.

“Negotiatio­ns need to have a purpose,” said Fabian Zuleeg of the EPC think tank. “We just spent another 4-5 days not moving forward, so adding more days doesn’t really help.”

He said the extension of talks just seems an indication “that neither side wants to be blamed for no deal.”

New Year’s Day will bring huge changes. No longer will goods and people be able to move between the U.K. and its continenta­l neighbors.

Exporters and importers face customs declaratio­ns, goods checks and other obstacles, and EU citizens will no longer be able to live and work in Britain without a visa.

 ??  ?? Ursula von der Leyen
Ursula von der Leyen

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