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Category Archives: Brexit
Brexit trade deal WILL be struck this year say UK negotiators – but only after EU tantrum – Express
Posted: May 2, 2020 at 2:47 pm
British officials expect a lot of noise between the two sides before Brussels eventually drops its hardline negotiating position. Talks between the UK and European Commission continued last week but ended with the bloc accusing Britain of refusing to engage on its plans for a regulatory level playing field and upholding existing fisheries access. But sources close to the UK negotiating team said a deal can be completed before the post-Brexit transition period expires at the end of the year.
Officials have suggested the row over the two sides redlines must first escalate before they can reach a compromise.
A source said: Im quite positive. I do believe in the core areas of this theres a good understanding between negotiators.
Im confident we will get over the disagreements. Probably a bit more noise has to happen before we get to that point.
Another round of online trade negotiations is scheduled for May 11.
Downing Street is expected to push for more one to one talks between Michel Barnier and David Frost, the EU and UKs chief negotiators, in an attempt to break the deadlock.
No10 wants senior Government officials to be able to open new channels of communications alongside the formal negotiations.
But the source said the UK would not budge on its approach to the talks and would reject the EUs continued access to Britains waters and attempts to lock the country into the blocs rulebook.
The source said: "What is slowing us up is the EU's insistence on extra provision, notably the level playing field area, aspects of governance, and of course there is no meeting of minds on fisheries.
"If they continue to insist on their position on a so-called level playing field and on continuing the Common Fisheries Policy, for example, we are never going to accept that. Draw your own conclusion from that, but I hope they will move on."
"There are some fundamentals that we are not going to move on because, not so much that they are negotiation positions, as they are what an independent state does, they added.
It is understood that British and EU negotiators hope virtual bonding sessions could help build the camaraderie needed to strike a deal.
MUST READ:Brexit snub: UK rejects Brussels' attempts to open embassy in Belfast
British officials remain confident that a deal can be struck despite the COVID-19 outbreak hindering the process.
I don't think the crisis makes any difference, the source said.
"It is a big and horrible thing to affect us but I sense that European Union chief negotiator Michel Barnier himself would like to get a deal and I sensed that before the crisis started."
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Brexit trade deal WILL be struck this year say UK negotiators - but only after EU tantrum - Express
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Coronavirus: We are all paying the price for the Tory government’s preoccupation with Brexit | Latest Brexit news and top stories – The New European
Posted: at 2:47 pm
Opinion
PUBLISHED: 14:24 01 May 2020 | UPDATED: 14:24 01 May 2020
The New European
Prime Minister Boris Johnson stands outside 10 Downing Street as he joins in the applause to salute local heroes during Thursday's nationwide Clap for Carers. Photograph: Aaron Chown/PA Wire.
Government negligence over coronavirus comes as a result of Tory preoccupation with Brexit, and we are all paying the price.
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Thousands of deaths in the Covid-19 pandemic is a tragic if inevitable statistic. Dozens of deaths of NHS frontline staff and care workers, however, represents negligence of stupefying dimensions. Now that a leaked Department of Health and Social Care report has confirmed the May and Johnson governments total failure to act on the conclusions of the 2017 Exercise Cygnus report, responsibility for the deaths of so many health workers lies firmly on the heads of the 2017-2019 government and its successor.
The prime minister now refers to the NHS as the beating heart of the nation but he leads a Conservative government and served in the cabinet of its predecessor, both of which have gone some way to starving this beating heart of the oxygen it needs to function properly.
Even Leavers cannot in all honesty deny that the preoccupation with Brexit has contributed to the governments negligence in failing to make adequate preparations for the current pandemic. It is an appalling tragedy that many NHS staff and care workers have paid the ultimate price for these shortcomings.
Anthony West
Kent
While Priti Patels statement hailing the drop in shoplifting has elicited quite a bit of ridicule, it has also done something much worse.
It has deflected attention from the fact that 20,000 people in the UK have died in hospital from coronavirus. That is one of the worst performances in the world and is a damning indictment of this governments tried-and-tested approach of using egregious nonsense to distract people.
People are dying because this government made bad decisions and wasted time while Italy and Spain struggled. They condemned and ridiculed those countries and did nothing to protect the people here.
Do not let them gaslight you into believing that they have achieved anything of merit by seeing a drop in shoplifting or that it would be very unreasonable to hold them accountable for thousands of deaths.
Audrey Christophory
Covid-19 is another one of those epochal moments when immense change happens in a short period of time. The Tories dont have the noddle to see this because it is the (now) utter irrelevance of Brexit that they think is the real story of our time.
Keir Starmer (Starmers battle on three fronts, TNE #191) should be setting up a task force to prepare for the post-Covid-19 and post-Brexit country Labour will surely inherit. The UK cant get left behind again like it did after the Second World War.
Will Goble
Rayleigh
Boris Johnsons experiences in ICU will have had a profound effect on him psychologically. Are we sure he is fit to return to lead a government 18 days later?
In rugby or football where a player on the pitch has suffered a head injury, the rules are that for the safety of the player and the wellbeing of the team, the victim cannot self-declare his own fitness to return to the field of play.
What process is there to safeguard the nation from a situation where an unfit prime minister returns to the head of government?
This is not just a medical question,
this is a constitutional question. Where are the checks and balances in the system?
John Edwards
Shoreham-by-Sea
Have your say by emailing letters@theneweuropean.co.uk
Almost four years after its creation The New European goes from strength to strength across print and online, offering a pro-European perspective on Brexit and reporting on the political response to the coronavirus outbreak, climate change and international politics. But we can only rebalance the right wing extremes of much of the UK national press with your support. If you value what we are doing, you can help us by making a contribution to the cost of our journalism.
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Tory MP David Davis urges government capitalise on coronavirus outbreak to seal a Brexit deal | Latest Brexit news and top stories – The New European
Posted: at 2:47 pm
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PUBLISHED: 11:34 01 May 2020 | UPDATED: 12:16 01 May 2020
Adrian Zorzut
David Davis listens in the House of Commons, London. Photograph: PA.
PA Archive/PA Images
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Davis made the claim on LBC radio with Nick Ferrari, arguing the EU were lunatics if they did not accept British demands for a no-tariff, no-quotas-style trade deal.
He said: What the European Union should do, if it has any sense at all, is to go for the option we are talking about of which is no tariffs and no quotas.
Youd have to be a lunatic to put tariffs and quotas on under the current economic circumstances so now is the time to do it. That is what we should do.
He said prolonging negotiations would create more uncertainty for UK businesses: The one time, apart from whats happening now, that we had an economic downturn since the [2017] election was when we delayed departure.
The uncertainty made all the businesses, even though claiming they didnt want to leave, suffer. You dont want to change that. You dont want to have another level of uncertainty.
The UK has ruled out seeking an extension to Brexit transition period, which ends on December 31. Recent talks in April failed to reach a breakthrough, causing the EU to ramp up preparations for a no-deal Brexit.
Almost four years after its creation The New European goes from strength to strength across print and online, offering a pro-European perspective on Brexit and reporting on the political response to the coronavirus outbreak, climate change and international politics. But we can only rebalance the right wing extremes of much of the UK national press with your support. If you value what we are doing, you can help us by making a contribution to the cost of our journalism.
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UK will need to extend Brexit transition, Merkel ally warns Britain – The Guardian
Posted: at 2:47 pm
Boris Johnson must extend the UKs transition out of the EU for up to two years to avoid compounding the economic damage of the coronavirus pandemic with a hugely disruptive and disorderly Brexit, according to a close ally of Angela Merkel.
In an interview with the Observer, Norbert Rttgen, chair of the Bundestags foreign affairs committee, said it was now impossible to see how the UK and other EU countries could agree even a minimal outline free trade agreement this year because the talks were so behind schedule.
The transition period is due to end on 31 December unless the UK asks for a prolongation by 30 June. The maximum extension would be two years, under the terms of the withdrawal agreement. Rttgen said he could not see any sensible option other than for the UK to apply for the extension to avoid even more damage to the British and European economies. On Friday, Michel Barnier said there had been limited progress in the initial stages of virtual negotiations, which he said was disappointing.
Rttgen, a member of Merkels Christian Democratic Union party, said: Before the current coronavirus crisis, I think it would have been possible to have a minimum agreement with the UK on the broad outlines to avoid a crash [the UK crashing out with no deal], with more detailed negotiations then taking place afterwards.
I cant imagine now that this is possible, given the fact that all the EU countries, Brussels and London are so absorbed by the pandemic and this will go on. Given this situation, I dont believe that there is a realistic possibility any longer to even achieve the necessary minimum. So you have to extend.
But he said it would be up to Boris Johnson to realise the consequences of a disorderly exit amid this pandemic.
The pandemic will cause more economic damage than we can now imagine. To think that you could then add to this extraordinary situation a very disorderly exit, to me is not imaginable. I think everyone will say that this is not in the British interest or in the interest of any of us.
The Brexit transition began when the UK left the EU on 31 January. The arrangement under which the UK is outside the EU but continues to be subject to its rules and a member of the single market and customs union was negotiated by both sides to smooth the UKs exit.
The transition was also designed to allow the UK to continue much of its previous relationship with the EU while the fine details of a future trading relationship and security co-operation were negotiated.
Barnier cited an alarming lack of progress in four of the most crucial areas of the talks. Sources said he was greatly frustrated that the UK did not appear ready either to discuss detail or make compromises.
The four areas of difference were the so-called level playing field (the extent to which the UK would adopt EU standards to have access to the single market); fisheries, particularly EU access to UK waters; security co-operation and governance issues.
The German MEP David McAllister, who chairs the UK co-ordination in the European Parliament (correct) said both sides were now under enormous time pressure to organise a half-way orderly exit of the UK from the single market and the customs union.
It had been hoped that an outline deal could be concluded over the coming months, in time for it to be signed off over the summer by EU leaders. But talks between the UK and EU sides are well behind schedule, although the second set of discussions, effected by video link, ended last week.
I think there is a recognition by some of the UK side that they will have to extend but no one knows how to do it
EU officials have said that concluding deals on such complex issues already a lengthy and tortuous process is far more difficult without face-to-face meetings. One high-level EU source said: You can get so far but what you cant do is go away into small groups of six or eight people in a dark room and hammer out the final, vital details. That is not possible in a virtual meeting.
The UK is also understood to have redeployed some of its staff who were posted to the EU trade talks to coronavirus duties since the Covid-19 pandemic developed.
The issue of whether to apply for an extension is now emerging as a huge additional problem for Johnson, who prides himself on having got Brexit done. Until now, Downing Street has said it will not contemplate asking the EU for an extension under any circumstances.
To do so, Johnson would have to reverse legislation that, in effect, bars him from seeking an extension, and he would have to agree additional financial contributions to the EU to pay for that extension.
Another senior EU politician involved in the talks said there were signs of division appearing on the UK side, with some civil servants and Tory MPs believing the UK had to find a way to abandon its opposition to extending the transition: I think there is a recognition by some on the UK side that they have to extend but no one knows how to do it. The question is what Johnson will decide when he returns to Downing Street after his illness. It is a big political problem for them.
The terms of the withdrawal agreement allow a UKEU joint committee to extend the transition period by up to two years, but it must sign off on the length of any extension before 1 July. EU lawyers say that once that window is missed, EU law makes it very difficult to agree to any extension.
Charles Grant, director of the Centre for European Reform, who is regularly in touch with diplomats in EU capitals, said: It will be very hard for both sides to reach the outlines of a free trade agreement by autumn, or indeed by June, which is when the PM wants to take a decision on whether it is worth pursuing a free trade agreement.
Last week should have been the fifth round of negotiations, but it was the second. The bottom line is that on both sides the top politicians attention is focused on coronavirus, not Brexit, which makes a deal in the short term highly unlikely.
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UK will need to extend Brexit transition, Merkel ally warns Britain - The Guardian
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Boris gives green light for Brexit Britain to start formal US trade talks NEXT WEEK – Express
Posted: at 2:47 pm
Downing Street has reportedly agreed for negotiations to kick off on Wednesday despite the coronavirus crisis. Donald Trump is said to be desperate to reach a deal ahead of the US presidential election in November.
A source told The Sun: No10 gave the green light late this week for the talks to start.
The process has been significantly speeded up.
The talks will be carried out remotely while coronavirus travel restrictions are in place.
The first round, which will last two weeks, will be held between International Trade Secretary Liz Truss and US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer.
Boris Johnson is said to have put off trade talks with the US until now due to ongoing negotiations with the EU.
The UK is in a transition period with Brussels until the end of 2020 as the two sides thrash out a free trade agreement.
READ MORE:UK/EU fishing plan on table 'in weeks' - but Barnier MUST give ground
The Prime Minister has repeatedly insisted he will not push back the deadline despite claims the timeframe is too tight.
Mr Trump promised to strike a massive trade deal with the UK after Mr Johnsons general election victory in December.
The US President said the agreement could be far bigger and more lucrative that any deal with the EU.
DON'T MISSBrexit deal now much more likely says Gove as he makes bold prediction[VIDEO]Former MEP reveals why Boris Johnson will not extend transition period[INSIGHT]EU WILL collapse to UK demands over no deal Brexit threat[POLL]
He tweeted: Congratulations to Boris Johnson on his great WIN!
Britain and the United States will now be free to strike a massive new Trade Deal after BREXIT.
This deal has the potential to be far bigger and more lucrative than any deal that could be made with the E.U. Celebrate Boris!
Stumbling blocks in a trade deal between the UK and the US could include food standards and the NHS.
Mr Trump sparked a backlash during his state visit last year when he suggested the health service could be on the table in an agreement.
But the US President later rowed back on the comments.
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Boris gives green light for Brexit Britain to start formal US trade talks NEXT WEEK - Express
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UK seeks access to EU health cooperation in light of coronavirus – The Guardian
Posted: at 2:47 pm
The British government is quietly seeking access to the European Unions pandemic warning system, despite early reluctance to cooperate on health after Brexit, the Guardian has learned.
The UK is seeking something akin to membership of the EUs early warning and response system (EWRS), which has played a critical role in coordinating Europes response to the coronavirus, as well as to earlier pandemics such as bird flu. According to an EU source, this would be pretty much the same as membership of the system.
The governments enthusiasm in the privacy of the negotiating room contrasts with noncommittal public statements. Detailed negotiating objectives published in February merely stated that the UK was open to exploring cooperation between the UK and EU in other specific and narrowly defined areas where this is in the interest of both sides, for example on matters of health security.
Health was not even mentioned in the governments written statement to Parliament, aside from a reference to pharmaceuticals. Meanwhile, the Daily Telegraph reported on 1 March that No 10 had blocked the Department of Healths request to be part of the EWRS.
A government spokesperson did not respond to a question about whether the UK was seeking a form of membership or participation in the EWRS, but referred back to the February negotiating objectives.
In private, the coronavirus, which had claimed at least 26,771 lives in the UK by Thursday, appears to have altered government thinking.
There was not much appetite from the UK at the beginning, said the EU source, referring to cooperation on health. Thats been corrected. They are keen and they are keen to be seen to be keen. Both sides want close cooperation.
However, the EU is not prepared to offer the UK full membership of the EWRS, an online platform set up in 1998 where public authorities share information about health emergencies.
Instead, EU officials propose to plug the UK into the system when a pandemic emerges, similar to arrangements for other non-EU countries.
Health security does not feature in the UK negotiating text sent in private to the EUs chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, although EU officials have received a non-paper outlining government aims on health.
In another sign of rising British interest in European cooperation, the Guardian has established that the UK attended all five of the EUs health security committee meetings on the coronavirus pandemic in April, a perfect attendance record, compared with a 70% British presence between 17 January and 30 March.
During the April meetings, officials discussed lockdown exit strategies and launching a joint procurement scheme on therapeutics in intensive care. No decision has been taken to launch this bulk-buying programme.
The Guardian first reported in March that the UK was not taking part in any of the EUs four procurement schemes, missing bulk-buying efforts on personal protective equipment for medical workers, ventilators and testing kit despite having attended relevant meetings.
Meanwhile, among NHS senior managers there is anxiety that Brexit talks risk significant elements of health being forgotten about, said Layla McCay, the international director of the NHS Confederation.
NHS organisations have been stood up and stood down and stood up again for potentially a no-deal Brexit, she said. If a quite thorough future relationship for health matters is not on track come June, then the NHS is going to have to start to prepare for specific disruption next year as a result of Brexit, and it will have to do so while also facing both winter and coronavirus challenges. It will be a significant extra ask.
British membership of the EWRS and broader EU health network strengthen our ability to respond as effectively as possible to health emergencies, McCay added.
The UK government spokesperson said: The safety and security of our citizens is a top priority. The UK is ready to discuss how our citizens can be kept safe and benefit from continued international cooperation on health security following the end of the transition period, where it is in our mutual interest.
Any such arrangements must align with the fundamental principles of respecting the UKs political and economic independence, recognition of the UK and EUs status as sovereign equals, and ensuring the UK has control over its own laws.
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UK seeks access to EU health cooperation in light of coronavirus - The Guardian
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SNP warn of ‘chilling prospect’ of no-deal Brexit as UK Gov won’t extend talks – The Scotsman
Posted: at 2:47 pm
NewsPoliticsThe UK faces the "chilling prospect" of a no-deal Brexit and a double blow to the economy because of the Government's refusal to extend the transition period, Ian Blackford has warned.
Saturday, 2nd May 2020, 12:55 pm
The SNP leader at Westminster accused the Conservative Government of behaving with the "height of irresponsibility" by not extending talks with the EU in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic.
But Tory MP David Duguid argued that keeping the "hardline target" would "focus efforts", despite the disruption and economic damage being caused by the global lockdown.
He also suggested that to push back the leaving date would affect any companies' plans they had devised before the coronavirus lockdown, as well as causing uncertainty for business.
With the withdrawal framework needing to be agreed by June, Mr Blackford said the country is heading towards a no-deal Brexit, describing the situation as a "very chilling prospect".
Calling for the Government to accept the EU's offer of an extension to the Brexit process, he said: "On the back of the health crisis, quite rightly we've had to take measures to protect people and that's meant that we've crashed the economy.
"Many people were talking about the UK economy shrinking by 35% as a consequence of that."I have to say to the Government it's the height of irresponsibility to then threaten this second blow to the economy if we're daft enough to go down the road of a no-deal Brexit."Speaking on BBC Good Morning Scotland, Mr Blackford suggested the Government was pushing ahead with the original Brexit deadlines so they can "blame any economic impact" on the coronavirus crisis, rather than as a result of leaving the European Union.Mr Duguid said that all Conservative MPs signed a pledge before the 2019 election that the UK would leave the UK no later than December 2020 and said not doing so would hinder our ability to negotiate new trade deals.While acknowledging the coronavirus will have a "huge effect on the economy", the Banff and Buchan MP suggested that would be made worse by "kicking the can down the road" and extending the negotiations with the EU."We need to keep that hardline target, that deadline, which will focus efforts," Mr Duguid said.
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SNP warn of 'chilling prospect' of no-deal Brexit as UK Gov won't extend talks - The Scotsman
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Gove Complains EU Not Respecting Sovereignty in Brexit Talks – Bloomberg
Posted: at 2:47 pm
The U.K. argues it isnt prepared to consent to demands the EU hasnt made of other countries -- including measures to stop U.K. businesses undercutting their European rivals and continued access for EU fishing boats to U.K. waters.
Photographer: Annie Sakkab/Bloomberg
Photographer: Annie Sakkab/Bloomberg
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Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove complained that the European Union isnt treating Britain like a sovereign state in talks about the two sides future relationship, underscoring the risk of an economic shock at the year-end if they cant reach a trade deal.
He told a committee of lawmakers in London that in areas such as fishing and the future influence of EU institutions the bloc is asking for more of the U.K. than it does of other independent countries, something that is unacceptable to the U.K. The government has called for political movement from the EU if the talks are to avoid failing.
The EUs stance is particularly difficult and challenging, Gove said to the House of Commons Committee on the Future Relationship with the EU on Monday. Im confident the EU will want to operate in a constructive way.
Goves emphasis on sovereignty exposes the disconnect between the two sides as time runs out for them to seal a deal. The EUs chief Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, last week dismissed the idea that the U.K. is the equal of the EU, saying the reality of this negotiation is that it is one between a market of 66 million consumers and the EUs 450 million.
Barnier also attacked the U.K. for failing to engage substantially in several key areas of the negotiations and for refusing to extend the deadline to reach a deal.
With the two sides at loggerheads, the U.K. looks increasingly likely to crash out of the bloc at the end of December without a trade deal, spelling disruption for businesses already grappling with the coronavirus pandemic.
Brexit Talks Marred by Accusation U.K. Is Running Down the Clock
Gove said he hoped the coronavirus crisis would focus the minds of EU negotiators on the importance of reaching a deal. He said the two sides would take stock of the talks in June. Asked about the chances of an agreement, the minister said they are now better than 50% -- but he also said he is a terrible predictor.
Earlier, Prime Minister Boris Johnsons spokesman called for the EU to modify its demands in two key areas: continued access for European fishing boats and the so-called level playing field.
The U.K. argues that the current fishing system is unfair because it allows EU boats to catch more in British waters than domestic vessels. The EU argues that it needs to include measures to stop the U.K. undercutting the blocs economy in any agreement because of the countrys geographical proximity.
All we are seeking is an agreement based on precedent, James Slack told reporters on Monday. The British government is ready to keep talking, but that doesnt make us any more likely to agree if Brussels doesnt change its position, he said. There will need to be a political injection on the EU side.
Failure to strike an accord by Dec. 31 would mean the return of tariffs and quotas as well as the imposition of bureaucratic barriers for businesses.
(Updates with Gove comments from first paragraph.)
Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
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Campaigners file case that argues EU citizenship is permanent regardless of Brexit | Latest Brexit news and top stories – The New European
Posted: at 2:47 pm
PUBLISHED: 10:37 28 April 2020 | UPDATED: 10:45 28 April 2020
Anti-Brexit demonstrators wave European Union and Union flags outside the Houses of Parliament in London. Credit: Yui Mok/PA
PA Wire/PA Images
A group of campaigners have filed a court case with the General Court of the European Union that argues EU citizenship is permanent status regardless of Brexit.
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The pro-EU activists believe legally all 66 million continue to hold the status, even when the transition period ends, allowing them to freely move and work in all 27 countries of the bloc.
As The New European reported last month, the legal case acknowledges that not all rights will applicable to UK residents - such as the right to vote or stand in European elections - but believe freedom of movement rights can still be preserved.
The campaigners argue that such status cannot be removed without their consent.
If successful it would allow UK citizens to remain EU citizens.
Dr Alexandra von Westernhagen, one of the lawyers behind the case, explained to The London Economic: Our case is formally an action partially to annul the decision of the EU Council of Ministers of 30 January 2020 which approved the UK/EU Withdrawal Agreement, insofar as it deprives the applicants, without their consent and without due process, of their status as EU citizens and their rights resulting from that status.
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The case asks what is the nature of the EU itself: is it a Union for its member states only? Or is it also a Union for and between the people of Europe? This is a fundamental question for all 515 million EU citizens and everybody else who believes in the idea of an international, value-based citizenship.
The European Commission denied to comment further, but said: We take note of the intention to begin legal proceedings.
Remain campaigners had hoped associate EU citizenship would allow those that did not support Brexit to retain links with the EU after the end of the transition period at the end of the year.
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Boris Johnson must extend Brexit talks for another YEAR, major Tory Party donor demands – Express
Posted: at 2:47 pm
Boris Johnson has repeatedly refused to extend Brexit any further as the Prime Minister has vowed to get trade talks done by December 31, 2020. But Mr Johnson is facing calls to delay following the coronavirus pandemic which have made trade negotiations challenging. The Conservative Party's leading donor, Alexander Temerko, has said to extend for at least one year.
Speaking to Sky News, Mr Temerko said: "We need a lift. It might be very slowly but very bravely.
"We definitely need to open businesses, maybe restaurants and hotels and return business to construction.
"That is very important today.
"On May 7, we need to start lifting the lockdown."
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He added: "Michael Gove, Boris and Alok Sharma totally agree that we need to use our national business to create new capacity for fighting this virus."
Mr Temerko went on to give his advice on Brexit.
He said: "We don't know what kind of rule will be when we leave Europe.
"If we leave Europe, the situation will be tougher.
"My advice is to extend for one year. It's not to continue the Remain idea, I think it would be better for the economy."
Zoom drinks and informal chats could be the way of breaking the post-Brexit trade deadlock, according to insiders.
The first two rounds of trade negotiations between the UK and European Union teams have so far been conducted online via video-conferencing due to the coronavirus pandemic.
But insiders said that while there were efficiency benefits to online working, the ability to "take people off for a coffee and talk stuff through" had been lost without face-to-face contact.
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And with social distancing measures likely to be in place until a COVID-19 vaccine is discovered, both sides are said to want to find "new ways" of establishing informal conversations in a bid to break the current deadlock.
Briefing reporters on Thursday about the progress of the virtual talks, a source close to the UK negotiating team said: "The downside is you can't take people off for a coffee and talk stuff through and have the informal discussions.
"We'll have to find ways of replicating that. We'll have to do it by video-conference, by phone and by other ways and we're going to have to be tolerant of each other.
"Obviously it is still possible to have the conversations, what's more difficult to replicate is the atmospherics.
"But that doesn't mean you can't do it and we will aim to do it over the next couple of months."
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Boris Johnson must extend Brexit talks for another YEAR, major Tory Party donor demands - Express
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