Boris Johnson and EU set Sunday deadline to
decide on Brexit deal
Significant gaps remain between PM and EU chief Ursula
von der Leyen after Brussels dinner
Daniel
Boffey, Jessica Elgot and Jon Henley
Wed 9 Dec
2020 22.28 GMTLast modified on Thu 10 Dec 2020 00.31 GMT
A Brexit
deal must be sealed by Sunday or there will be no deal, Boris Johnson and
Ursula von der Leyen agreed after a “lively and frank” three-hour summit that
set the stage for a dramatic final act of the negotiations.
Despite
nine months of troubled talks, “very large gaps” were said to remain between
the UK and EU. The leaders said they should come to a deal or no deal outcome
by the end of the weekend, with pressure on both sides to find time for
parliamentary ratification.
Downing
Street said the meeting in Brussels had been “frank” – a diplomatic expression
for a heated conversation. The commission president, Von der Leyen, tweeted:
“We had a lively and interesting discussion on the state of play on outstanding
issues.
“We
understand each other’s positions. They remain far apart. The teams should
immediately reconvene to try to resolve these issues. We will come to a
decision by the end of the weekend.”
An EU
source close to the negotiation said that while the difficulties were real,
both sides still believed a deal was possible.
Flanked by
his chief negotiator and senior aides, Johnson had told the European commission
president and the bloc’s chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, that he could not
accept terms in a treaty that would tie Britain to EU rules.
As he
spelled out his position over a three-course meal of scallops, turbot and
pavlova in the commission’s Berlaymont headquarters, EU sources said the bloc
planned to publish its no-deal contingency plans “very soon indeed” in order to
keep planes flying and protect borders in the event of talks collapsing
irretrievably.
A senior No
10 source said: “The prime minister and Von der Leyen had a frank discussion
about the significant obstacles which remain in the negotiations.
“Very large
gaps remain between the two sides and it is still unclear whether these can be
bridged. The prime minister and Von der Leyen agreed to further discussions
over the next few days between their negotiating teams.
“The prime
minister does not want to leave any route to a possible deal untested. The
prime minister and Von der Leyen agreed that by Sunday a firm decision should
be taken about the future of the talks.”
Earlier in
the day EU leaders had told their parliaments the negotiations were on the edge
of failure. “At the moment we are on the precipice of a no-deal [Brexit],”
Ireland’s taoiseach, Micheál Martin, told the Irish parliament.
Johnson
arrived at the commission’s headquarters just after 8pm local time, where he
posed for pictures with Von der Leyen before retreating to a meeting room with
their chief negotiators for a half-hour discussion. The two teams, joined by
further officials, then sat down to a fish dinner.
As Von der
Leyen and Johnson met, the commission president warned him over the need to
remain Covid-secure, telling him: “Keep [your] distance.”
She added
that the prime minister should remove his mask. “Then we have to put it back
on,” she said. “You have to put it back on immediately.” “You run a tight ship
here, Ursula, and quite right too,” Johnson responded.
The dinner
ended after just over three hours. The 27 EU heads of state and government will
meet on Thursday, when Von der Leyen is likely to update them on the talks.
Sources
said the leaders would not engage in a debate and did not intend to make any
decisions on Brexit during the two-day summit.
EU capitals
now face a nervous wait for answers from Brussels. In the Bundestag, the German
chancellor, Angela Merkel, had said earlier in the day that her government was
willing to let the negotiation collapse if Downing Street continued to reject
the EU’s approach.
“If there
are conditions coming from the British side which we cannot accept, then we
will go on our own way without an exit agreement,” she said. “Because one thing
is certain: the integrity of the single market has to be maintained.”
The main
hurdle is seen by both sides as the EU’s demand for an “evolution” or “ratchet”
clause to ensure that as one side upgrades its standards, the other is not able
to enjoy a competitive advantage.
Before
flying to Brussels from RAF Northolt, Johnson told the Commons that the EU had
tabled terms no British prime minister could accept. “Our friends in the EU are
currently insisting that if they pass a new law in future with which we in this
country do not comply or don’t follow suit, then they want the automatic right
to punish us and to retaliate,” he said.
“And
secondly, they’re saying the UK should be the only country in the world not to
have sovereign control over its fishing waters. I don’t believe that those are
terms that any prime minister of this country should accept.”
The
description of the EU’s negotiating demands was rejected in Brussels, raising
hopes that Johnson was establishing a “straw man” argument to blow away later
in favour of a compromise that he can sell to his Brexiter backbenchers. “I
don’t recognise that, it doesn’t ring a bell,” said one senior EU diplomat. “I
don’t know what he is referring to, let’s put it that way.”
Merkel told
German parliamentarians that the EU, with the “evolution” clause, was merely
seeking to manage the inevitable divergence in environmental, social and labour
standards, which are currently shared.
The UK’s
chief negotiator, David Frost, has agreed to non-regression from a common
baseline of standards at the end of the transition period.
But EU negotiators
want a forum for discussion when the current minimum standards become outdated
owing to developments on one side. There would then be arbitration and the
potential for one side to hit back with tariffs or other corrective measures if
the other drags its feet on agreeing a new “level playing field” of minimum
standards. Downing Street fears this will mean an alignment of standards via
the back door.
The House
of Commons could sit as late as Christmas Eve should it be required to pass a
Brexit bill, Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle, said on Wednesday. Under current plans,
the Commons will stop sitting on December 21, but he told Sky News that recess
could be delayed.
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