The talks
appeared to go badly, according to DW correspondent in Brussels, Barbara Wesel.
The three major obstacles of fair competition, governance of the deal, and
fisheries remain, she said, and there appeared to have been "absolutely
zero movement" on these. There are no higher authorities on the Brexit
trade deal and so a lack of movement now has little recourse for hope, Wesel
explained. "A no-deal might be looming indeed."
Ahead of
the meeting, German Chancellor Angela Merkel expressed her skepticism over the
dinner's possible results. "There is still the chance of an
agreement," she said during a speech to German lawmakers. She also
stressed that the EU would not compromise on its core principles. "One
thing is clear: the integrity of the [EU's] internal market must be
preserved."
Merkel told
the German parliament that the bloc would "take a path without an
agreement if there are conditions from the British side that we can't
accept." Before the meeting, Johnson said a post-Brexit deal was still
possible. "A good deal is still there to be done. I look forward to
discussing it with Commissioner von der Leyen tonight," he told
Parliament. He also said, however, that there were some terms that "I
don't believe ... any prime minister of this country should accept." The
primary conflicts revolve around fishing rights in British waters, ensuring
fair competition for companies on either side of the English Channel, and ways
to solve future disputes.
Reaching a
deal by the end of the year would ensure that there are no blanket tariffs or
quotas on trade in goods on January 1, although there would still be new costs
and red tape for businesses. Failure to secure a deal would mean following
international trade rules established by the World Trade Organization and the
introduction of tariffs and other barriers that would hurt both sides, albeit
affecting roughly 45% of British foreign trade as opposed to around 8% of
Europe's. "We must have a level playing field not just for today, but we
must have one for tomorrow or the day after, and to do this we must have
agreements on how one can react if the other changes their legal situation,''
Merkel said. "Otherwise there will be unfair competitive conditions that
we cannot ask of our companies.'' Michael Gove, a senior minister in Johnson's
government, told Times Radio the EU would have to compromise if it wanted a
deal. "The EU has to move," he said. Failure to secure a deal would
put around $1 trillion (€825 billion) in annual trade at stake, and would likely
snarl borders, shock financial markets and create chaos throughout supply
chains across Europe.
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