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Donald Tusk demands answer to Irish border question next month Chequers plan is dead, says Tusk as Macron calls Brexiters liars
(35 minutes later)
Donald Tusk, the European council president, has ratcheted up the pressure on Theresa May by warning of a breakdown in the Brexit talks unless she delivers a solution for the Irish border by October – a deadline the British prime minister had already said she will not be able to meet. Donald Tusk, the European council president, has ratcheted up the pressure on Theresa May by dumping the Chequers plan and warning of a breakdown in the Brexit talks unless she delivers a solution for the Irish border by October – a deadline the British prime minister had already said she will not be able to meet.
The threat to unravel the talks came as the French president, Emmanuel Macron, broke with diplomatic niceties and accused those of backing Brexit of being liars. “Brexit is the choice of the British people,” he said, “pushed by those who predicted easy solutions... Those people are liars. They left the next day so they didn’t have to manage it.” The stark threat to unravel the talks came as the French president, Emmanuel Macron, broke with diplomatic niceties and accused those of backing Brexit of being liars. “Those who explain that we can easily live without Europe, that everything is going to be alright, and that it’s going to bring a lot of money home are liars,” he said. “It’s even more true since they left the day after so as not to have to deal with it”.
The comments came at the end of a leaders’ summit in Salzburg, where May had appealed for the EU to compromise to avoid a no-deal scenario. The comments came at the end of a leaders’ summit in Salzburg, where May had appealed for the EU to compromise to avoid a no-deal scenario. She had been hoping to take warms words over Chequers into Conservative party conference.
Tusk, who moments before his comments had a short meeting with the prime minister, also said he wanted to wrap up successful talks in a special summit in mid-November. Tusk, who moments before his comments had a short meeting with the prime minister, told reporters that he also wanted to wrap up successful talks in a special summit in mid-November.
But he told reporters that this would not happen unless the British government came through on its commitment to finding a “precise and clear” so-called backstop solution that would under any future circumstances avoid a hard border on the island of Ireland. But, in a step designed to pile pressure on the prime minister, he said that this would not happen unless the British government came through on its commitment to finding a “precise and clear” so-called backstop solution that would under any future circumstances avoid a hard border on the island of Ireland.
“Without an October grand finale, in a positive sense of this word, there is no reason to organise a special meeting in November,” Tusk said. “This is the only condition when it comes to this possible November summit.”“Without an October grand finale, in a positive sense of this word, there is no reason to organise a special meeting in November,” Tusk said. “This is the only condition when it comes to this possible November summit.”
The deadline of the weekend of 17 and 18 November is a looming threat to May, who had told the Irish prime minister, Leo Varadkar, earlier in the day that she did not think it was possible by the October summit for her government and the EU to come to a compromise on the issue. The deadline of the weekend of 17 and 18 November on the Irish issue is a looming threat to May, who had told the Irish prime minister, Leo Varadkar, earlier in the day that she did not think it was possible by the October summit for her government and the EU to come to a compromise on the issue.
The EU have proposed that Northern Ireland in effect stays in the single market and customs union as the rest of the UK withdraws. The EU has proposed that Northern Ireland in effect stays in the single market and customs union as the rest of the UK withdraws.
The prime minister insists she will not sign up to such a plan, which she claims would economically and constitutionally “dislocate” the UK.The prime minister insists she will not sign up to such a plan, which she claims would economically and constitutionally “dislocate” the UK.
Tusk also offered a withering assessment of the economic proposals in the Chequers plan, under which the UK would have a common rulebook with the EU for goods, and benefit from frictionless trade and an independent commercial policy through a bespoke customs arrangement.
“It must be clear that there are some issues where we are not ready to compromise and first of all this is our fundamental freedoms and single market and this is why we remain sceptical and critical when it comes to this part of the Chequers proposals,” he said.
Macron dismissed the prime minister’s suggestion that Chequers was the only solution other than a no-deal scenario.
He said of the white paper: “It was a good and brave step by the prime minister. But we all agreed on this today, the proposals in their current state are not acceptable, especially on the economic side of it. The Chequers plan cannot be take it or leave it,” he said.
The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, agreed during her press conference that “substantial progress” was needed on the UK’s withdrawal agreement by the next European council meeting in October, in order to pave the way for it to be finalised at a special summit in November.
Merkel said there was “still a large piece of work” on the separate issue of future trade relations with the UK. The EU27 was “united that, in the matter of the single market, there can be no compromises”, she said.
“No one can belong to the single market if they are not part of the single market.”
BrexitBrexit
IrelandIreland
Northern IrelandNorthern Ireland
Donald TuskDonald Tusk
European UnionEuropean Union
Foreign policyForeign policy
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