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French minister: Cannot exclude 'no-deal' Brexit but that's not in UK interest


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French minister: Cannot exclude 'no-deal' Brexit but that's not in UK interest

 

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FILE PHOTO: French Junior Minister for European Affairs Amelie de Montchalin arrives at a General Affairs Councilc meeting at the EU headquarters in Brussels, Belgium February 25, 2020. Kenzo Tribouillard/Pool via REUTERS

 

PARIS (Reuters) - A senior French official said on Friday she could not rule out the European Union’s trade talks with departed ex-member Britain ending without a deal though it was in the British interest to reach one.

 

“I am not ruling out anything,” Junior European Affairs Minister Amelie de Montchalin told Europe 1 radio, when asked if she could rule out a no-deal Brexit.

 

“Those who need a deal the most are the British. They cannot withstand a second shock after the epidemic. They wouldn’t have access to the security net that is Europe, they wouldn’t have access to the stimulus fund,” she added, alluding to the economic hit to European states caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson told visiting French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday that talks on a post-Brexit deal cannot drag on into the autumn.

 

Montchalin said: “We will not yield to this deadline pressure, this final sprint that Britain want to impose on us in the hope we will cave in. We do not want a deal for the sake of having a deal but we want a balanced deal.”

 

Britain left the European Union on Jan. 31 but talks on a future relations have so far made little progress. Johnson and EU leaders say a deal is achievable, but both sides say time is running out and the prospect of no-deal remains.

 

An internal document obtained by Reuters this week showed the German government is urging other EU states to prepare for a no-deal Brexit, casting doubt on Johnson’s public optimism about chances of an early agreement on future ties.

 

A transition period during which Britain remains in the EU’s customs union and single market expires on Dec. 31 and Johnson has ruled out extending it.

 

Montchalin was speaking as EU leaders hope to unite behind an unprecedented stimulus to inject billions of euros into their coronavirus-ravaged economies at a teleconference meeting on Friday.

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2020-06-19
 
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7 minutes ago, Zillod said:

It really is like treading in a dog turd that you just can't flick off your shoe.  I think people are past caring about deal or no deal, just get on with it!  However bad "No-deal" is, it's better than the dying swan that Brexit has become.  Britain will recover just fire the starting pistol.

 

The trigger was pulled 4 years ago.

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1 hour ago, Zillod said:

It really is like treading in a dog turd that you just can't flick off your shoe.  I think people are past caring about deal or no deal, just get on with it!  However bad "No-deal" is, it's better than the dying swan that Brexit has become.  Britain will recover just fire the starting pistol.

 

Please carry on with it...

just watch out not to fire it in your foot ????

Edited by david555
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3 hours ago, grumpy 4680 said:

        Deal or no deal, the UK did okay before going in to the common market, Yes it may hurt the British pocket, But where does all the money come from for the EU stimulous package, some from Britain, no doubt.

        Give it some time, there will be deals under the table for British goods, and maybe we will be able  to get some cheaper fish able again.

 

Yeah the UK did ok before joining the rest of Europe - they had an empire.

 

As far as your claim that the UK will "no doubt" be contributing to the stimulois package, where is your evidence of this? As far as I'm aware any monies previoulsy agreed to have already been assigned to existing projects and initiatives and I've not read anything indicating that the UK is prepared to commit to this new funding - or maybe you just made that up?

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10 hours ago, terryw said:

Why do European politicians say it is not in the UK's interest to have a No Deal? The fact is that it is in everyones interest to have a deal. The EU will be just as badly affected if there is no agreement.

 

That's very true. Extending deadlines also helps the EU are it secures more British payments into their coffers.

 

She right, the EU doesn't want a deal just for the sake of it. Neither does the UK.

 

Both want a fair and balanced deal. Only the ideas of what a fair and balanced deal looks like are quiet different.

 

This is a negotiation, not the EU laying down everything they want.

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11 hours ago, terryw said:

Why do European politicians say it is not in the UK's interest to have a No Deal? The fact is that it is in everyones interest to have a deal. The EU will be just as badly affected if there is no agreement.

Mathematically this makes no sense. The EU is about 6 times as large as the UK. So only if EU trade with the UK outweighed the UK's by 600 percent would that make sense. And that is definitely not the case. UK trade with the EU is a far bigger percentage of its economy than is the EU's with the UK.  

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10 hours ago, englishoak said:

 

I agree its in everyones best interest to have a deal, i also agree initially the UK would be hit harder in the event of no deal but, The very worst hit however would be the EU member Ireland, which it has itself said a number of times a no deal would be a total disaster, more burden on the EU. As the UK continues to make trade deals around the globe the pendulum swings back again and the EU will be the worse off just as the UK will find new markets. These other trade deals and partnerships in the event of a initial EU no deal would just galvanise better deals for new UK trade partners and the EU would begin to lose ground to them too. A US deal could come relatively fast especially if Trump is reelected which is the last thing the EU wants without a deal itself first. 

 

The city of London which contributes by far the most tax revenues through financial services will and is expected to experience rapid growth and investment once decoupled,  its very good at what it does and Id expect the UK gov to support future incentives for financial business growth of the city. It will no doubt attempt to capitalise on Hong Kongs imminent demise, it is already making that clear and the public offering of long term stay arrangements to HK residents was a clear dog whistle that the city of London will be very welcoming to financial and banking interests in HK needing a new home. Frankfurt cannot compete with the Banking regulatory freedoms and incentives the UK will be able and willing to offer our former colony, theres no doubt about that. 

 

Nope I am not worried about an initial no EU deal, it is likely to be very temporary at worst. 

What makes you think that other nations are so eager to do trade deals with the UK?

As for the UK financial services doing better, why would that be? UK firms are going to lose their passporting rights in the EU.

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7 minutes ago, CorpusChristie said:

Why is that relevant ?

Brits will still be able to go to E.U countries when we want to go 

In this context "passporting rights" has nothing to do with foreign travel. In this particular case it means that British financial firms can do business subject to the same rules as any other EU financial firm can no matter where in the EU the business is being conducted.

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