Brexit
#May orders ministerial 'away-day' to sort out squabbling ministers
Prime Minister Theresa May will gather together squabbling British ministers at her country residence after this month’s European Union summit to hammer out the final details of a much-anticipated Brexit policy paper, writes William James.
With less than a year to go until Britain leaves the European Union, May has yet to agree some of the fundamental details of what type of trading relationship she wants to have with the bloc after Britain leaves in March next year.
As a result, talks with the EU have all but ground to a halt, raising fears among businesses and in Brussels that Britain could end up crashing out of the bloc without an agreed deal.
“There’s going to be a lot happening over the next few weeks. You know, people want us to get on with it and that’s exactly what we’re doing,” May told reporters on her way to a G7 summit in Canada.
May will look to the 28-29 June EU summit as a chance to pin down some of the most troublesome details of Britain’s exit agreement and pave the way for more intensive talks on the all-important future economic partnership between the world’s fifth largest economy and the world’s biggest trading bloc.
Before leaving for Canada, May was forced into crisis talks with her Brexit minister who had challenged her so-called backstop plan to ensure no hard border on the island of Ireland. Then her foreign minister, Boris Johnson, was recorded saying there could be a Brexit meltdown.
With that in mind, May said she was planning to summon ministers to Chequers, her country residence, for an “away-day” aimed at ending months of squabbling and agreeing the contents of a so-called ‘white paper’ policy document.
Ministers had said it would be published before the June EU summit, suggesting rows had helped delay the paper.
Jeremy Corbyn, the leader of the opposition Labour party, criticized the delay to the white paper.
“The government promised a ‘detailed, ambitious and precise’ Brexit white paper this month setting out their negotiating priorities. Once again it’s been postponed. The Tories are botching Brexit and risking jobs and our economy in the process,” he said in an emailed statement.
May said her government and the EU were still working towards an October deadline in talks with the EU to secure an agreement on the terms of Britain’s withdrawal and an outline of the future partnership.
“From my point of view what we’re doing is working to develop that future relationship because there’s a big prize for the UK here at the end of this.”
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