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UK's May to speak to every EU head in bid for Brexit deal changes


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UK's May to speak to every EU head in bid for Brexit deal changes

By Paul Sandle and Stephen Addison

 

2019-02-17T031525Z_1_LYNXNPEF1G01C_RTROPTP_4_BRITAIN-EU.JPG

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May is seen outside Downing Street in London, Britain, February 13, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

 

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's Theresa May plans to speak to every European Union leader and the European Commission chief to seek changes to her EU withdrawal agreement, days after another defeat from her own lawmakers and as businesses brace for a no-deal Brexit on March 29.

 

In her talks with EU leaders and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker she will be seeking to change the Irish backstop, one of the most contentious parts of the withdrawal agreement she agreed in November, her office said.

 

May has told EU leaders she could pass her deal with concessions primarily around the backstop - a guarantee that there can be no return to border controls between the British province of Northern Ireland and EU-member Ireland.

 

But a defeat in a symbolic vote in parliament on Thursday has weakened her pledge and increase the risk of a "no-deal" Brexit in 40 days.

 

The backstop has become one of the main points of contention ahead of Britain's planned departure from the EU next month after 45 years.

 

In a letter to her divided Conservative lawmakers, May asked them to put aside "personal preferences" and unite in the interests of the country by backing a deal.

 

"Our party can do what it has done so often in the past: move beyond what divides us and come together behind what unites us; sacrifice if necessary our own personal preferences in the higher service of the national interest," she wrote.

 

Culture Secretary Jeremy Wright said on Sunday that changes needed to be made to the backstop, and that did not necessarily mean the agreement needed to be reopened.

 

"I don't think it's the mechanism that matters, it's the objective," he told the BBC's Andrew Marr.

 

"If you can get to a place where the potential longevity of the backstop - the potential that the backstop lasts for ever - can be adequately dealt with, that's what we are all seeking to do," he said.

 

On Monday, Brexit Secretary Steve Barclay will meet EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier, and on Tuesday, Attorney General Geoffrey Cox, will make a speech setting out what changes would be required to eliminate the legal risk that Britain could be trapped in a Northern Irish backstop indefinitely.

May's office did not give a date for the Juncker talks.

 

Unless May can get a Brexit deal approved by the British parliament, she will have to decide whether to delay Brexit or thrust the world's fifth-largest economy into chaos by leaving without a deal at the end of March.

 

With the clock running down, businesses have said they have been left with no choice but to start enacting emergency measures to cope with a no-deal scenario, KPMG said on Sunday.

"Businesses are now testing the airbags on their Brexit preparations," said James Stewart, head of Brexitat KPMG UK.

 

"Time is a luxury we no longer have, so people are bracing themselves for the immediate potential impacts."

 

Airbus, which designs and manufactures wings for its aircraft in Britain, said on Sunday a "no-deal" Brexitwould be "absolutely catastrophic".

 

"There is no such thing as a managed 'no deal', it's absolutely catastrophic for us," senior vice president Katherine Bennett told Marr.

 

"Some difficult decisions will have to be made if there's no-deal (...) we will have to look at future investments."

 

(Reporting by Stephen Addison and Paul Sandle; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2019-02-18
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3 minutes ago, Srikcir said:

May can't convince her own Parliament on a deal.

How is it reasonable that she will convince 27 nations of a new deal?

At least she seems to "have game."

At least she seems to "have game.", it is called "winding down the clock"...

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1 hour ago, Basil B said:

At least she seems to "have game.", it is called "winding down the clock"...

 

Exactly. She wants to be seen to be trying so at the last minute she can say she tried really hard but it's her deal or no deal.

 

Disgusting woman.

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22 minutes ago, Enoon said:

 

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"S***.....she's back......you talk to her".

 

 

 

Hardly, as May did her v. best to promote the worst possible deal for the uk, including one part that would result in the uk likely remaining part of the eu forever, and paying 39 bn on top of the annual cost.... for the privilege!

 

I've no doubt that both May and the eu are still looking for a way that will give the (mostly remainer) MPs an excuse to vote for BRINO (that they hope will be acceptable to the electorate as a result of the no deal scare stories), whilst paying an addtl. 39 bn.....

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6 hours ago, webfact said:

Airbus, which designs and manufactures wings for its aircraft in Britain, said on Sunday a "no-deal" Brexitwould be "absolutely catastrophic".

 

"There is no such thing as a managed 'no deal', it's absolutely catastrophic for us," senior vice president Katherine Bennett told Marr.

 

"Some difficult decisions will have to be made if there's no-deal (...) we will have to look at future investments."

It is a side issue, perhaps, but the more cynical might consider that the future of Airbus wing production in the UK was always under review. After all, there is a certain logic, as well as a massive saving to be made in making the wings in the same place as the rest of the airframe...

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Our party can do what it has done so often in the past: move beyond what divides us and come together behind what unites us; sacrifice if necessary our own personal preferences in the higher service of the national interest," she wrote.

 

Any credibility she ever had vaporized in an instant with this utter drivel of contempt????

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57 minutes ago, Thingamabob said:

Only one way to go-leave with no deal. After that, work hard together to overcome difficulties. Remainers continuing to moan to leave the UK with good riddance.

And why should we go through all of that only to be worse off?  If the clock is successfully wound down by May then MP's will reluctantly go with her deal.  It is crap but still better than leaving with no deal at all.  May knows that and that is why she is taking the route she is taking now.

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