Barnier sets Johnson a midnight deadline for Brexit concessions
Michel Barnier has set Boris Johnson a midnight
deadline to concede to EU demands and agree to a customs border in the Irish
Sea or be left with nothing to take to the Commons.
According to sources, the EU’s chief negotiator told
ministers that, as it stood, there was little prospect of a deal being signed
off by leaders at a summit on Thursday, before a special sitting of the UK
parliament on Saturday.
Legal text had yet to be tabled by the British
negotiators, Barnier told ministers in Luxembourg. He advised the EU capitals
he would announce on Wednesday whether negotiations on an agreement would have to
continue into next week.
Barnier warned that the starting point for a deal
had to be the Northern Ireland-only backstop, keeping it in the EU’s single
market for goods and erecting a customs border in the Irish Sea, a proposal
previously rejected by Theresa May.
After the meeting, Belgium’s deputy prime minister,
Didier Reynders, told reporters: “If we have an agreement tonight it will be
possible to go to the [European] council and then again to the British
parliament. But it’s not easy, we have some red lines, they are well known by
all the partners. I’m hoping it will be possible today to make some progress.”
The Brexit secretary, Stephen Barclay, who was also
in Luxembourg and briefly met Barnier on Tuesday morning, insisted a deal was
“still very possible”. “The talks are ongoing”, he said. “We need to give them
space to proceed but detailed conversations are under way.”
A press conference with Barnier was cancelled on
Tuesday morning in a sign that the negotiations remain highly fluid.
Finland’s prime minister, Antti Rinne, whose country
holds the rolling EU presidency, had suggested on Monday evening that time had
run out for Downing Street, and negotiations would need to continue next week.
The thorny issue of how to avoid a hard border on
the island of Ireland continues to dog the negotiations. The UK has accepted
that Northern Ireland will remain in the EU’s single market for goods although
it is seeking to find a way to time-limit the arrangement through a consent
mechanism for Stormont.
Barnier told ministers that the UK had dropped the
Stormont lock idea tabled by the prime minister on 1 October, which would have
in effect given the Democratic Unionist party a veto on arrangements for
avoiding a hard border coming into force and staying in force.
The problem of a customs border remained difficult
but fresh ideas were being discussed, Barnier told the ministers.
Downing Street last week accepted there would not be
a border on the island of Ireland but the government has also been seeking a
way to avoid one in the Irish Sea on the basis that it would represent an
economic dislocation of the country.
The EU has rejected the UK’s proposal of a dual
system at Northern Ireland’s ports and airport that would involve tracking
goods entering from Great Britain and applying differential treatment depending
on their final destination.
Barnier has instead pushed the UK to accept a model
closer to a Northern Ireland-only backstop. Under one proposal being discussed,
Northern Ireland would not be part of the EU’s customs territory, but the
bloc’s full customs code would have to be enforced in the Irish Sea. “Northern
Ireland would de jure be in the UK’s customs territory but de facto in the
European union’s”, said an EU source.
Speaking before the meeting with ministers, Barnier
told reporters: “Our teams are working hard and the work just starts now,
today.
“This work has been intense all over the weekend and
yesterday, because even if the agreement will be difficult, more and more
difficult to be frank, it is still possible this week – reaching an agreement
is still possible, obviously any agreement must work for everyone, the whole of
the UK and the whole of the EU. Let me add that it is also high time to turn
good intentions into a legal text.”
France’s EU minister, Amélie de Montchalin, raised
the prospect of a Brexit extension beyond 31 October as she arrived in
Luxembourg.
She said: “Time alone is not a solution. However, if
a significant political change takes place in the UK then that could
potentially justify a discussion on an extension if we were asked for it.
“A significant political change is the prospect of
an election, a referendum, something that changes the political dynamic so that
the triangle between the government, parliament and the British people could
align with each other a bit more. We believe that time alone will not solve the
complexity of what is at stake.”
EU sources said the British government appeared to
be moving towards the Brussels model, and that a new customs proposal had been
tabled on Monday. Talks between UK and European commission officials went late
into the night on Monday and began again on Tuesday morning.
“I’m not quite sure if a deal is close but we are
trying to do our utmost best to find such a good deal because a hard Brexit
would be a disaster not just for the UK but also for the EU27,” said Germany’s
EU affairs minister, Michael Roth.
A UK government spokesman said: “As part of the
talks process, there is, of course, back and forth and new texts have been
shared by both sides repeatedly – that’s what a negotiation is.”