U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson and European Commission President
Ursula von der Leyen used a phone call on Saturday to plot the way
forward toward a Brexit deal, but said that large differences still need
to be bridged if there is to be an agreement.To get more news about
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The prime minister and the European Unions chief official will now
allow their negotiators --David Frost for the U.K. and Michel Barnier
for the EU -- to resume trade talks in London, in what a U.K. spokesman
described as a redoubling of efforts. They had been paused since
Thursday to enable the two sides to take stock.
“Some progress has been made, but large differences remain especially
on level playing field and fisheries,” von der Leyen said in a Tweet.
“Our teams will continue working hard next week. We will remain in close
contact in the next days.”
Both the EU and U.K. have previously indicated that Nov. 15 is the
very last moment a deal can be done if it is to be ratified by their
respective parliaments before the post-Brexit transition period ends on
Dec. 31 and the U.K. formally leaves the European single market.
A statement from the U.K. echoed both the determination and the
difficulties. Talks have been stuck for months on the key issues of the
level playing field for business and access to British fishing waters.
Prime Minister @BorisJohnson and Commission President @vonderleyen spoke today about our negotiations with the EU.
My talks with @MichelBarnier will continue in London on Monday. pic.twitter.com/BfmJm7oVFD
— David Frost (@DavidGHFrost) November 7, 2020
“The Prime Minister set out that, while some progress had been made in
recent discussions, significant differences remain in a number of
areas, including the so-called level playing field and fish,” a U.K.
government spokesperson said. Johnson and von der Leyen “agreed that
their negotiating teams would continue talks in London next week,
beginning on Monday, in order to redouble efforts to reach a deal,” the
spokesperson said.
After 14 straight days of negotiations, the two sides offered a
downbeat assessment earlier this week on the state of play, with each
blaming the other for the lack of progress. The talks are stuck on three
big issues: the so-called level playing field for business, access to
British fishing waters and how any potential deal is enforced.
Returning to London tomorrow night. Negotiations will continue next
week with @DavidGHFrost and the UK team to find an agreement that
respects the interests and values of the EU and its 27 Member States.
https://t.co/eDSzleyqoV
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