Natasha Devon 6pm - 9pm
UK needs to 'make up its mind' on post-Brexit deal, Brussels says
9 March 2020, 12:12
Brussels has said the UK needs to "make up its mind" on exactly what kind of post-Brexit trade deal it wants to have with the EU.
Ursula von der Leyen, the President of the European Commission admitted there were "differences in the approach" between the two sides following the first round of negotiations.
President von der Leyen said the more distant the UK wants to be from the single market the more difficult it will be to access it, "so the UK needs to think about what trade-offs it wants to accept in trade talks with the EU."
Boris Johnson's negotiation team has set out its mandate for a free trade along the lines of the one the EU has with Canada, but Brussels has called for a closer relationship including a "level playing field" for areas including workers' rights, environmental protections and state subsidies to ensure fair competition between the neighbouring economies.
“We have made a good start in these first 100 days. We will work hard every single day to deliver a good future for the next generations of Europeans.”
— European Commission 🇪🇺 (@EU_Commission) March 9, 2020
President @vonderleyen on the achievements of the #vdLCommission’s first 100 days.https://t.co/8hLA1HMP7w
The commission president said "we know what each side is standing for" but later claimed that the UK needed to think about the economic trade-offs it was willing to accept if it breaks away from EU rules.
Her comments are likely to frustrate the UK side, which believes it has been clear about the more limited arrangement it is seeking from the EU in the negotiations.
Boris Johnson's blueprint for the negotiations indicates the UK could walk away unless the "broad outline" of a deal is clear by the end of June.
Asked whether there would be a "landing zone" for a deal in June, the commission president told reporters in Brussels: "I think now we both have presented our negotiation mandates, you know that we want to be very ambitious, we want to have a very good relationship with our British friends.
"We are are aware that there are differences in the approach towards what scope should the future agreement have and what are - if I may say so - the rules of the game everybody has to abide to.
"So it will be important that the UK makes up its mind - the closer they want to have access to the single market, the more they have to play by the rules that are the rules of the single market.
"If this is not the UK's choice then of course they will be more distant and it will be more difficult for the UK to access the single market.
"So I think it's up to the UK within the negotiations to think about the trade-offs they want to take into account."
After the first round of talks in Brussels last week, the Prime Minister's Europe adviser David Frost said the two sides "now understand each other well".
Michel Barnier, the EU's lead negotiator, said the talks had been "constructive" but there were "very serious divergences" between the sides.
The next round of talks is scheduled to start on March 18.