‘Basic foundations’ ready
British and European negotiators ploughed on with Brexit talks yesterday hoping that at least an outline deal can be found in time for the European summit.
European leaders will head to Brussels today hoping to decide whether to give the go-ahead to officials to draw up a final withdrawal treaty.
But first, EU negotiator Michel Barnier and European diplomats want to know if Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson can sell the draft deal at home.
“The basic foundations of an agreement are ready and in theory tomorrow we could accept this deal with Great Britain and avoid the chaos and the misfortune linked to an uncontrolled, chaotic exit,” Donald Tusk, the president of the European Council, said on Poland’s TVN24 news.
“Theoretically, in seven or eight hours everything should be clear,” summit host Tusk added as negotiators prepared for a second gruelling late night shift at the Brussels conference table.
In London, Johnson met his sceptical Northern Irish allies the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) for the third time in three days to try to shore up support for a compromise deal.
The DUP will find it hard to accept a reported offer to allow Northern Ireland to stick to EU customs rules after Brexit, which the EU wants to see to avoid the return of a hard border on the island of Ireland.
Brexit minister Steve Barclay described the closed-door meetings in Brussels as “intensive” and confirmed Britain would ask for another Brexit extension if there is no deal by Saturday.
Briefing European commissioners, Barnier confirmed that “ongoing talks have been constructive but there still remains a number of significant issues to resolve.”
Earlier, Barnier had said a draft of any deal would have to be ready by early Wednesday if it was to go before European leaders at their summit, which begins today.
European diplomatic sources said, the leaders expect to make one of three choices. They could either give the nod to the draft text that Barnier and UK negotiators are drawing up as the basis to a formal treaty or agree that the talks are promising and set a timetable for further work. Or, more pessimistically, they could conclude that the two sides are still so far apart that new ideas are needed if Britain is to avoid crashing out of the bloc without a deal on October 31.
Johnson has promised to take the UK out of the European Union on October 31, with or without a follow-on agreement to maintain orderly economic ties with its former partners.
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