The Guardian (USA)

Von der Leyen says parts of Brexit talks 'completely open' ahead of showdown

- Daniel Boffey and Jennifer Rankin in Brussels and Patrick Wintour in London

Ursula von der Leyen has described the most difficult parts of the Brexit negotiatio­n as remaining “completely open” but backed an intensific­ation of talks ahead of a crunch video-conference call with Boris Johnson.

After the latest and last scheduled round of negotiatio­ns in Brussels on a trade and security deal, the European commission president said there remained “a lot of work to do”, with 100 days left before the UK exits the single market and customs union.

But the former German defence minister told journalist­s at the end of an EU summit: “Where there is a will there is a way”.

Her comments came as a spokesman for the prime minister said Johnson would speak to the commission president on Saturday afternoon to “take stock of negotiatio­ns and discuss next steps”.

After their last meeting in June, Johnson had declared it time to put a “tiger in the tank” of the negotiatio­ns. The prime minister had insisted it was even possible to strike a deal before the summer was out. Three months have since passed.

Von der Leyen said the two sides were still stuck on the issues of access to British waters for European fleets and the so-called level playing field provisions being pushed by Brussels to ensure neither economies can undercut standards or unfairly subsidise businesses through state aid.

In a sign of the significan­t difference­s that remain, she side-stepped the question of whether the talks could go into a so-called “tunnel” negotiatio­n, where the two sides work on creative solutions outside the scrutiny of the media and domestic politics, but pointed to the economic ravage caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic as reason to find agreement.

Von der Leyen and the Irish taosieach, Micheál Martin, briefed the heads of state and government on the latest developmen­ts during the summit of leaders where discussion­s were otherwise focused on foreign affairs.

Speaking later, the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, said she was unable to report on a “breakthrou­gh” between the UK’s chief negotiator, David Frost, and his EU counterpar­t, Michel Barnier, but remained optimistic as long as the talks continued.

Merkel described the UK’s internal market bill, which would unilateral­ly overturn parts of the Brexit withdrawal treaty, as “a very bitter moment”. In London, Mick Mulvaney, US special envoy for Northern Ireland, said he was sending the same message to Downing Street as the US Democrats in warning that a US-UK free trade deal could be blocked if the Northern Ireland Good Friday agreement was undermined by Brexit.

But Merkel decoupled the row over the withdrawal agreement from the trade and security talks with the UK. In comments that will be welcomed in Downing Street, she said that an agreement on fisheries signed this week between the UK and Norway was “at least an indicator for being on a constructi­ve path”.

British officials argue that Norway,

a non EU member state that conducts annual negotiatio­ns with the bloc on fishing quotas, should be the model for a post-Brexit deal on shared stocks.

Merkel also said she recognised that the UK wanted to be independen­t of EU standards and state aid rules and that other means would be required to ensure a level playing field. “And that’s something that we need to respect that we’re going to respect and we have to find appropriat­e answers to this”, she said.

The Dutch prime minister, Mark Rutte, said a deal with the UK was a “geopolitic­al necessity”. “I’m not more nor less optimistic that I was before this European council [summit]”, he said. “I’ve always been cautiously optimistic.”

The two sides will continue in talks over the next two weeks with an EU summit on 15 October looming as a key moment.

Johnson had suggested last month the UK could walk away from the talks to concentrat­e on no-deal preparatio­ns should there be no agreement by midOctober. Brussels had also hoped to have a deal in place by the time of the summit.

The first or second week of November is now being seen as the real deadline for agreement given the need to find time time for ratificati­on by the European parliament and in Westminste­r. Barnier is due to meet Merkel on Monday in Berlin.

Ahead of this week’s talks, five new draft negotiatin­g documents were submitted by the government, including legal texts on fisheries, the “level playing field”, law enforcemen­t and judicial cooperatio­n, civil nuclear cooperatio­n and social security coordinati­on.

The Guardian revealed on Wednesday that Britain had offered a three-year transition period for European fishing fleets to allow them to prepare for the post-Brexit changes as part of an 11thhour deal sweetener. The catches of EU fishermen would be “phased down” between 2021 and 2024 to offer time for European coastal communitie­s to adapt to the changes but the French government is refusing to countenanc­e the major changes to catches being proposed by London.

On state aid, EU sources said the UK had offered to lay out a series of “principles” on controllin­g domestic subsidies. But the paper failed to offer appropriat­e “governance” proposals that would allow Brussels to keep the UK to its pledges, EU sources said.

 ?? Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters ?? Boris Johnson, the UK prime minister, and the European commission president, Ursula von der Leyen in London in January.
Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters Boris Johnson, the UK prime minister, and the European commission president, Ursula von der Leyen in London in January.

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