Follow Us

Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on LinkedIn
 

29 June 2018

The Guardian: EU leaders say single-market access for goods a nonstarter


Theresa May has been told by European leaders that an attempt to protect the UK’s industrial base by gaining single market access for goods alone after Brexit is a nonstarter, as the Irish prime minister warned: “We are not going to let them destroy the European Union.”

After being given a “broad brush approach” presentation at a Brussels summit of May’s long-awaited paper, yet to be signed off by her warring British cabinet, the taoiseach, Leo Varadkar, told her that unless the final document presented a departure from the UK government’s thinking over the last two years, it would be dead on arrival.

The British government is continuing to push the idea of keeping frictionless trade on goods, claiming that it would be a good deal for Europe, given the large trade surplus it enjoys.

May has promised to publish her vision for the future trading relationship after a cabinet meeting at Chequers on Friday. [...]

Belgium’s prime minister, Charles Michel, said he was “not very optimistic at this point”.

He added: “Feeling that dominates is the impression that the Brits continue to negotiate with the Brits and not with the EU. The red lines set by the UK are globally incompatible with the fundamental principles of the EU.” [...]

Varadkar said the prime minister had, however, taken time in the margins of the summit to give a briefing on her plans.

He told reporters: “What she said to me was that she hoped it would form the basis of negotiations on the final status treaty.

“I did say, and she understood me, that there really isn’t any point in putting forward something that wouldn’t possibly form the basis of negotiations, and that would be anything that would engage in cherrypicking, would have one of the four freedoms but not all four. Trying to have some of the benefits but not the responsibility and costs. If it is still in that space it isn’t going to be the basis of a negotiation ... There would certainly be no point in producing papers similar to those produced last summer.”

Varadkar added: “If that principle were to be conceded there would be Eurosceptics and right-wing populist parties in every second country of Europe who would say cannot we have the same deal. While we really regret that the UK has decided to leave the European Union, we are not going to let them destroy the European Union.”

Earlier in the day, the EU’s chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, focused on what he described as the “huge and serious divergence” between the UK and the bloc on avoiding a border on the island of Ireland.

Barnier, who gave the EU leaders a presentation on the state of the talks, added: “Now we are waiting for the UK white paper and I hope it will contain workable and realistic proposals, but let me mention once again that the time is very short.”

According to Bloomberg, one unnamed prime minister was said to have told aides that he believed there was now a 50% chance of the Brexit talks failing, after listening to May on Thursday evening, up from 20%. [...]

Full article on The Guardian



© The Guardian


< Next Previous >
Key
 Hover over the blue highlighted text to view the acronym meaning
Hover over these icons for more information



Add new comment