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After Johnson defeat, UK team faces sceptical EU

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Dave CLARK -


British and European customs and border experts met on Wednesday for technical talks, as Boris Johnson’s government struggles to convince anyone it is serious about negotiating a revised Brexit withdrawal deal.


Johnson lost his first parliamentary battle as British prime minister on Tuesday when rebel and opposition MPs opposed to a “no-deal” departure from the European Union stripped him of his governing majority. But London’s Brexit “sherpa”, senior diplomat David Frost, was due in Brussels for closed door talks with an EU task force to explore possible alternatives to the “Irish backstop” clause in a withdrawal treaty.


Johnson insists the backstop, which keeps Britain in the EU customs union until another way is found to keep the Northern Irish border open, must go if the UK is to sign up to any new deal for an orderly divorce. But EU leaders see the backstop as the only way to protect their single market and the Northern Ireland peace agreement — and they accuse Johnson of failing to come up with any credible alternative suggestion. At home, Johnson’s opponents accused him of carrying out a sham negotiation while hurtling towards an economically disastrous no-deal Brexit on October 31, and British MPs are trying to pass a law to force him to ask for a delay.


But British officials point to Frost’s visit on Wednesday as evidence they are engaging in good faith with Brussels and in turn seeking ideas from the European side to break the impasse.


A British official source said the talks would go on all month and “intensify”, arguing the prime minister “wants to get a deal and is ready to work in an energetic and determined way to get it done”.


The team intends for the talks to “run through a range of issues, including the removal of the backstop,” he said.


“Discussions so far have shown that the two sides remain some distance apart on key issues but are willing to work hard to find a way through,” he said.


European officials are sceptical, both that Johnson is sincere and that he even has a domestic mandate to negotiate while preparing for a likely snap election in the wake of his calamitous parliamentary defeat.


On Tuesday, the European Commission spokeswoman said the British side had presented no “concrete proposals” to replace the backstop and that Brexit is still expected on October 31, with or without a deal. A European diplomat said EU leaders would probably agree to another extension beyond this date if the British ask and “if it prevents a chaotic Brexit.” But he stressed that the negotiations are in trouble. “The fundamental problem is that the British


government and parliament disagree on what they want,” the European official said. — AFP


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