Senin, 07 Desember 2020

Can Boris Johnson salvage a post-Brexit trade deal? - BBC Newsnight - BBC News

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  1. Can Boris Johnson salvage a post-Brexit trade deal? - BBC Newsnight  BBC News
  2. As it happened: Brexit talks fail to break deadlock  BBC News
  3. BREAKING: Brexit - PM and EU chief's phone call ends with 'significant differences'  Sky News
  4. Boris Johnson's Brexit deal will light the fuse for a Tory civil war  The Guardian
  5. The architects of Brexit drove this act of self-destruction, but they won't own it  The Guardian
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-12-08 00:30:44Z
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Boris Johnson agreed to head to Brussels for last-minute Brexit showdown - Daily Mail

'Sometimes, you've got to look into each other's eyes': Boris Johnson agreed to head to Brussels for last-minute Brexit showdown after chief negotiator warned talks were on the brink of collapse

  • UK chief negotiator told Boris Johnson input was needed from top in Brexit deal
  • Lord David Frost and Michel Barnier talks stall following diplomatic bombshell
  • Stalemate came after Emanuel Macron told EU to take a tougher stance on Brexit

More than four years ago, Britain voted to take back control. Last night Boris Johnson decided he'd have to do it in person.

Wary of the tactics used to humiliate Theresa May, the Prime Minister has been reluctant to travel to Brussels.

His predecessor was frequently invited to EU events, only for the bloc's leaders to publicly reject her plans.

But after his chief negotiator warned talks were on the brink of collapse – and two lengthy phone calls to the European Commission president failed to break the deadlock – Mr Johnson accepted that the benefits of going to Brussels now outweighed the risks.

'Anyone who has been involved in negotiations knows that sometimes you have got to look each other in the eyes,' an insider said yesterday.

'There is a limit to how far you can get just talking on the phone. But this is the last step.'

The move comes after days of fruitless talks following a diplomatic bombshell from Michel Barnier last week. 

After his chief negotiator warned talks were on the brink of collapse Mr Johnson (pictured) accepted that the benefits of going to Brussels now outweighed the risks.
Two lengthy phone calls to the European Commission president (pictured) failed to break the deadlock

After his chief negotiator warned talks were on the brink of collapse – and two lengthy phone calls to the European Commission president (pictured right) failed to break the deadlock – Mr Johnson (pictured left) accepted that the benefits of going to Brussels now outweighed the risks

The move comes after days of fruitless talks following a diplomatic bombshell from Michel Barnier (pictured) last week

The move comes after days of fruitless talks following a diplomatic bombshell from Michel Barnier (pictured) last week

On Thursday afternoon, the EU's chief negotiator re-tabled old demands for the UK to respect not just existing EU laws, but all laws that the bloc might pass in the future.

The move – blamed by Downing Street on Emmanuel Macron – dismayed Britain's chief negotiator, Lord Frost, who knew the PM would never accept it.

Mr Johnson had been preparing to agree a 'non-regression' clause that would see the UK maintain existing standards on issues such as state aid, workers' rights and the environment.

However, sources said the demand for the UK to align with future EU regulations was 'a complete non-starter'.

Lord Frost was so alarmed that he broke off from the talks in a dingy conference room in the Business Department – dubbed 'the Cave' – to brief the PM in person.

Mr Johnson was later heard singing Waltzing Matilda in his office in an apparent reference to trading with the EU on Australian-style terms – No 10 code for No Deal.

The weekend saw the Chief Whip Mark Spencer bombarded with messages from Tories urging Mr Johnson not to back down.

With Michael Gove having travelled to Brussels yesterday, rumours continued to swirl about possible compromise

With Michael Gove having travelled to Brussels yesterday, rumours continued to swirl about possible compromise  

Eurosceptic MP Andrew Bridgen warned publicly that the PM would be 'finished' if he failed to protect British sovereignty.

UK officials were quick to point the finger at Mr Macron for torpedoing talks that had seemed destined for success just days earlier.

Environment Secretary George Eustice admitted: 'There's no denying that the end of last week was quite a setback.'

One source said: 'At the start of the week we saw Macron agitating with other EU capitals that they were giving away too much.

'Then you see Barnier bringing this [clause] back and the whole process goes backwards. I think everyone can join the dots.

'We want a deal but it has to be on the basis that we are a sovereign country again. Some people still seem to be struggling with the concept that we are going to be an independent country setting our own rules. If it stays like that there will be no deal.'

On Saturday the PM spent an hour on the phone to Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission.

On Saturday the PM spent an hour on the phone to Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission

On Saturday the PM spent an hour on the phone to Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission

The call was by all accounts cordial but unproductive.

Lord Frost and his team were soon back at London's St Pancras station, boarding the Eurostar for another round of face-to-face talks.

Amid growing signs of tension on the EU side, Dutch sources briefed the media that the bloc was preparing to drop France's hardline demands on fishing – only for the claim to be denied by both sides.

With Michael Gove having travelled to Brussels yesterday, rumours continued to swirl about possible compromises.

Mr Johnson, meanwhile, got to grips with a crab on a walkabout in his constituency with his London mayoral candidate Shaun Bailey.

Later he spent another 40 minutes on the phone with Mrs von der Leyen – but this call also yielded no significant results.

Mr Johnson had attempted to smooth the way to a deal by offering to drop controversial measures relating to Northern Ireland, which ministers admit would 'break international law' by going against parts of last year's Withdrawal Agreement. The move appeared to have no effect.

'There has not been any progress since Friday,' said one source close to the negotiations.

'It is clear that the current process has got to the end of the road – there are only so many times that negotiators can go round the same issues without some fresh political input.

'We still think we can get a deal but there is a very real chance that we might not got there.'

'We have made no tangible progress,' No 10 said last night. 'It's clear this must now continue politically.'

Boris Johnson will head to Brussels THIS WEEK in a last-ditch bid to save Brexit by taking control of the trade negotiations himself

By Jason Groves in London and James Franey in Brussels for The Daily Mail

Boris Johnson will head to Brussels this week in a last-ditch bid to save the Brexit talks.

In a high-stakes gamble, the Prime Minister will take personal charge of trade negotiations that appear to be running out of road, and hold talks with European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen in the hope of breaking the deadlock.

Mr Johnson's decision to travel to Brussels – probably tomorrow – came after a second lengthy phone call with Miss von der Leyen in 48 hours failed to produce a breakthrough.

In a joint statement following the 40-minute call last night, the two leaders said EU negotiator Michel Barnier and the UK's David Frost will be asked to prepare an overview of the 'remaining differences' ahead of the crunch meeting. They added: 'We agreed that the conditions for finalising an agreement are not there, due to the remaining significant differences on three critical issues: level playing field, governance and fisheries.

Boris Johnson (pictured speaking to European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen today) will head to Brussels this week in a last-ditch bid to save the Brexit talks

Boris Johnson (pictured speaking to European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen today) will head to Brussels this week in a last-ditch bid to save the Brexit talks

'We asked our chief negotiators and their teams to prepare an overview of the remaining differences to be discussed in a physical meeting in Brussels.'

Downing Street declined to say when Mr Johnson would travel to Brussels. But sources said it was unlikely to be today, and insisted the PM would not gatecrash a summit of EU leaders in Brussels due on Thursday and Friday – leaving tomorrow as the most likely option. Mr Barnier yesterday told MEPs that tomorrow was the final deadline for a deal.

Earlier, Mr Johnson offered an olive branch to the EU by saying he would drop controversial measures in the Internal Market Bill, which break last year's Brexit deal on issues relating to Northern Ireland.

But with time running out before the end of the Brexit transition this month, ministers remained downbeat about the prospect of a deal.

In a high-stakes gamble, the Prime Minister will take personal charge of trade negotiations that appear to be running out of road, and hold talks with European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen (pictured) in the hope of breaking the deadlock

In a high-stakes gamble, the Prime Minister will take personal charge of trade negotiations that appear to be running out of road, and hold talks with European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen (pictured) in the hope of breaking the deadlock

One senior Government source said there remained 'every chance' of No Deal, adding: 'Talks are in the same position now as they were on Friday. We have made no tangible progress. It's clear this must now continue politically. Whilst we do not consider this process to be closed, things are looking very tricky and there's every chance we are not going to get there.'

Another source flatly denied suggestions Mr Johnson was travelling to sign off a deal that is already all-but there, adding: 'Anyone who thinks this is some sort of victory lap has no idea what is going on.'

The prospect of Mr Johnson trying to strike a grand bargain on Brexit is likely to alarm some Tory Eurosceptics.

One MP warned Mr Johnson against capitulating to the EU's demands that Britain remain tied to Brussels regulations for ever, adding: 'If the PM goes to EU summit with that in mind, he will come back as Neville Chamberlain, instead of Winston Churchill.'

Mr Johnson's decision to travel to Brussels – probably tomorrow – came after a second lengthy phone call with Miss von der Leyen (pictured) in 48 hours failed to produce a breakthrough

Progress towards a deal was torpedoed last week after French president Emmanuel Macron pressured Mr Barnier to toughen his stance.

Mr Barnier is demanding that EU trawlers accept only modest cuts to their quotas in British waters, and that these are phased in over ten years – a request branded 'ludicrous' by Environment Secretary George Eustice.

On the wider issue of the so-called 'level playing field', Mr Johnson has signalled he is willing to guarantee that existing EU standards on things such as state aid subsidies, workers' rights and the environment will not be cut after Brexit.

But Mr Barnier last week upped the EU's demands to require the UK to also stay in line with regulations that Brussels passes in the future – a request branded 'completely unacceptable' by No 10.

The EU is also insisting on the right to levy 'lightning tariffs' on the UK if it judges that Britain has diverged too far from Brussels regulations. Mr Macron has warned he is ready to veto any deal he deems unacceptable. But German Chancellor Angela Merkel has made clear she wants agreement.

In a joint statement following the 40-minute call last night, the two leaders said EU negotiator Michel Barnier (pictured) and the UK's David Frost will be asked to prepare an overview of the 'remaining differences' ahead of the crunch meeting
Britain's Chief Negotiator of Task Force Europe David Frost

In a joint statement following the 40-minute call last night, the two leaders said EU negotiator Michel Barnier (left) and the UK's David Frost (right) will be asked to prepare an overview of the 'remaining differences' ahead of the crunch meeting

Both leaders have been in close contact with Miss von der Leyen about tactics in recent days, but sources said neither was currently willing to discuss the deal directly with Mr Johnson.

Both sides yesterday acknowledged that the talks were in crisis. Cabinet Office minister Penny Mordaunt told MPs that talks were at a 'critical moment', with the level playing field being the 'most difficult' issue.

Mr Barnier told MEPs the two sides were facing 'huge problems', adding: 'When it comes to timing, we are in the end game. In any event there will be a decision by Thursday. So let's say on Wednesday, we cannot go beyond that. Be it negative or positive.'

Irish foreign minister Simon Coveney said: 'Having heard from Michel Barnier this morning, really the news is very downbeat. I would say he is very gloomy.'

No Deal would mean tariffs on goods traded between the UK and EU. Ministers are also worried about the prospect of severe disruption to Channel crossings.

One Cabinet source said: 'The possibility of chaos on the Channel crossing has been underpriced.'

The pound fell sharply on the gloomy signals emerging from both camps before recovering most of its value in the wake of the announcement of the meeting between Mr Johnson and Miss von der Leyen.

In the Commons, senior Tories urged the PM not to abandon his negotiating position.

Former Cabinet minister Liam Fox said: 'We all want to see a deal but the difficulties are not really about trade... but EU politics.

'It's about ensuring no country follows the United Kingdom in exercising their legal powers to leave the European Union, and the desire of some in the EU to limit the competitive potential of post-Brexit Britain.'

Fellow Tory Philip Davies urged the PM to 'stand firm in these negotiations and deliver on the Brexit so many people voted for'.

Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner said: 'A year after he told the British people his deal was "oven-ready", the fact he is making a last-dash trip to Brussels demonstrates the scale of his failure.'  

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2020-12-07 22:08:00Z
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Brexit: MPs vote to reinstate controversial parts of Boris Johnson's Internal Market Bill - Sky News

MPs have voted to reinstate controversial parts of a bill that could override the Brexit divorce deal and break international law.

They rejected an earlier decision by the House of Lords to strip out key sections that would take precedence over the EU Withdrawal Agreement.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson's big Conservative majority meant the measures that have sparked consternation at home and abroad passed comfortably, by 357 votes to 268.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson
Image: Boris Johnson will head to Brussels within days

Three Tory MPs rebelled to vote against the government, while 12 others - including Theresa May - abstained.

The draft legislation will now be sent back to the House of Lords, beginning what is known as "ping pong" - when the two chambers do not back down to the other's amendments.

More from Brexit

Ministers argue the provisions are needed to protect the integrity of the UK and the Good Friday Agreement in the event no trade deal is struck with Brussels by the end of the transition period on 31 December.

But former Tory prime ministers have been deeply critical of the bill, Mrs May warning it will wreak "untold damage" on Britain's international reputation and John Major saying he found the move "incredulous" and "unprecedented".

The UK internal market bill will set out how the four nations will trade after Brexit
Image: Ministers argue the provisions are needed to protect the integrity of the UK

Legal action was also launched by the EU back in October.

The UK government said on Monday it would "be prepared to remove" the offending parts if a future relationship agreement can be salvaged.

The prime minister will head to Brussels "in the coming days" to meet EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to try and secure a breakthrough.

Following a call between the pair on Monday afternoon - their second in 48 hours - they said in a joint statement: "We agreed that the conditions for finalising an agreement are not there due to the remaining significant differences."

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2020-12-07 22:50:33Z
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No deal Brexit likely: EU starts ‘contingency planning’ instead of ‘necessary compromises' - Daily Express

According to Ireland's Foreign Minister, the EU has now stepped up no deal preparations over fears an agreement will not be reached before the end of this month. Although talks will continue this week, he claimed the "mood" in Brussels had now moved towards planning for a no deal rather than finding a compromise to reach a trade agreement. He said: "I think there is a great deal of frustration on the EU side, not just within the EU negotiating team, but also across member states.

"Many of the ministers I spoke to today are just getting increasingly frustrated and increasingly resigned to the fact that there may be no deal.

"In Brussels, the mood is starting to shift to contingency planning for a no deal as opposed to the compromises that are necessary to get a deal done".

Today, the Irish official had also warned Wednesday was the final deadline for a deal to be agreed. 

He also called for further intervention at the national level in order to break the deadlock. 

He said earlier today: "Beyond Wednesday we're into a European Council meeting and I think if there is no deal by Thursday, then leaders within the EU will certainly start to think about contingency planning for a no trade deal Brexit."

Today, Boris Johnson and EU Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen, held a call to discuss the current state of play. 

It was the second call the two have held in the last week and lasted for 90 minutes with both concluding the areas of divergence still remain. 

Mr Johnson will now travel to Brussels in order to attempt to break the current impasse between the two sides. 

JUST IN: Brexit LIVE: Remainers delight at Macron's demands for extension

"Whilst we do not consider this process to be closed, things are looking very tricky and there's every chance we are not going to get there."

It is thought Mr Barnier revealed the Wednesday deadline during a meeting with MEPs today. 

The EU needs any deal to be ratified by both the European Parliament and due to its nature, national governments.

Due to the short timetable, Brussels may ask national government to ratify the deal at a later date in order for it to be implemented as soon as possible. 

The areas of divergence being the level playing field, the dispute mechanism and fisheries have all remained throughout crunch talks. 

It is thought the EU's chief negotiator was pressured not to back down to the UK's demands over fisheries last week.  

At the heart of the issue is the quantity of fish caught by EU ships and the amount of access they are given. 

If the two sides failed to reach a deal, they will revert to annual negotiations on fisheries from January 1. 

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2020-12-07 20:17:00Z
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Johnson to go to Brussels in search of way out of Brexit stalemate - Financial Times

Boris Johnson is to travel to Brussels for make-or-break talks on a UK-EU trade deal, with negotiations deadlocked and warnings that there was “every chance” they may fail.

The British prime minister will meet Ursula von der Leyen, European Commission president, “in the coming days” as nine months of talks on a post-Brexit relationship between the two sides come to a head.

“We have made no tangible progress,” said a senior British official. “It’s clear this must now continue politically. Whilst we do not consider this process to be closed, things are looking very tricky and there’s every chance we are not going to get there.”

Mr Johnson and Ms von der Leyen agreed on Monday after a 45-minute phone call that their chief negotiators should “prepare an overview of the remaining differences to be discussed in person”.

Timings have not been confirmed, but the meeting could take place on Wednesday ahead of Thursday’s European Council meeting in Brussels. Both sides said Mr Johnson would not attend the 27-country summit.

Number 10 played down the idea that the scheduling of face-to-face talks might be a positive sign. One ally of the prime minister said: “The differences are every bit as big as they were before.”

The fact that talks are continuing in spite of disagreements on a fair competition “level playing field”, fisheries and the governance of any trade deal offered some hope that an agreement was still possible.

But Ireland’s foreign minister said there had been “no progress at all” in two days of intensive talks since the negotiation resumed on Sunday, saying other EU member states were becoming “increasingly frustrated”.

“In Brussels certainly the mood is starting to shift to contingency planning for a no-deal,” Simon Coveney told RTE television after arriving in Dublin from talks in Brussels. 

Mr Johnson’s allies have made it clear the prime minister is willing to walk away from talks, but Downing Street said he remained “keen” to strike a free trade agreement on the right terms.

People briefed on the Johnson-Von der Leyen call said that both sides felt it was time for political-level talks © Andrew Parsons/No10 Downing Street

The call between Mr Johnson and Ms von der Leyen was not intended to be an opportunity to cut deals on key sticking points, but rather to take stock of the two sides’ existing positions. Officials on both sides of the negotiations remained downbeat about the significant divisions that remain in key areas of the negotiations, and were making no predictions about the likelihood of a deal.

Things remain “very difficult”, said one EU official. The fact that Mr Johnson was coming to Brussels showed “things are not falling off the cliff, but we haven’t solved the issues in the past days that the negotiators were here. It shows more work needs to be done.”

Officials on both sides stressed that it was not surprising that Mr Johnson should be the leader who travelled, given that the two leaders last face-to-face meeting was in London.

People briefed on the call said that both sides felt it was time for political-level talks and Ms von der Leyen suggested she should play host after going to Downing Street earlier this year.

The independent Office for Budget Responsibility has warned that a no deal Brexit on January 1 would inflict a 2 per cent hit on the UK economy — about £40bn — and add around 300,000 to the jobless total next year.

Sterling fell as much as 1.6 per cent against the US dollar to touch a two-week low just above $1.32, before picking up later in the day, leaving it 0.8 per cent lower at $1.33 by late afternoon in London. 

People briefed on the talks said that negotiators on Monday had sought to tackle continued deep-rooted splits over fishing rights in UK waters and “level playing field conditions” for business.

On fisheries, a problem going into Monday’s talks was the UK’s continued resistance to guaranteeing access for European boats to its waters 6-12 nautical miles from the coast, as well as the length of a transition period covering fishing grounds further out.

Splits over the level playing field concern the EU’s determination to secure means of taking rapid redress against the UK if it seeks to gain an unfair competitive advantage through the use of subsidies or through having weaker environmental and labour regulations.

Earlier on Monday Mr Johnson attempted to lift the gloom hanging over the talks by offering to scrap controversial lawbreaking clauses from UK legislation relating to Northern Ireland.

Mr Johnson said that if the two sides reached an agreement on the operation of the NI protocol, part of Britain’s EU withdrawal deal, the contentious clauses would not be necessary.

Although welcomed in Brussels, one EU diplomat said that the move amounted to the UK “trying to use rogue behaviour as leverage”.

Mr Johnson had insisted on clauses in the UK internal market bill as a “safety net” to ensure the free flow of goods between the mainland UK and Northern Ireland in the event London and Brussels could not reach an understanding over how to apply last year’s deal and trade talks failed.

Ministers admitted the clauses would allow ministers to break international law, since the legislation would override Britain’s withdrawal treaty with the EU; the issue has dogged trade talks ever since.

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2020-12-07 19:49:00Z
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Brexit: Boris Johnson to go to Brussels as 'significant differences' hamper EU trade talks breakthrough - Sky News

Boris Johnson will head to Brussels for post-Brexit trade talks after a phone call with the EU Commission president ended with "significant differences" unresolved.

The pair spoke on Monday afternoon - their second conversation in 48 hours - but were unable to overcome the three remaining stumbling blocks: Governance, the level playing field and fisheries.

In a joint statement, the prime minister and Ursula von der Leyen revealed they asked their negotiators to "prepare an overview of the remaining differences" and will meet face-to-face "in the coming days".

BRUSSELS, BELGIUM - DECEMBER 05: EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen delivers a statement on the ongoing Brexit negotiations on December 5, 2020 in Brussels, Belgium. Current trading rules between the United Kingdom and the European Union expire December 31, the end of a transition period following the UK departure from the group in January of this year. (Photo by Thierry Monasse/Getty Images)
Image: Ursula von der Leyen held a call with the prime minister on Monday

There is less than a month to go until the end of the transition period - due to expire on 31 December. It came into force after Brexit happened on 31 January.

Tensions are rising as talks go down to the wire, with businesses unsure exactly which rules they will be operating under and what costs products may incur for being exported or imported.

An electronic billboard
Image: There is less than a month until the transition period ends

Both sides' had set a deadline of mid-October for the talks to conclude, but that has been continuously pushed back and may now continue towards a summit of EU leaders on Thursday.

A senior UK government source said "no tangible progress" had been made since Friday, when Brussels' chief negotiator Michel Barnier was in London.

More from Brexit

Freight lorries queuing along the M20 in Kent waiting to access the Eurotunnel terminal in Folkestone on Tuesday
Image: Deal or no-deal will have big implications for businesses who export or import

"Whilst we do not consider this process to be closed, things are looking very tricky and there's every chance we are not going to get there," they added.

Rachel Reeves, Labour's shadow minister for the Cabinet Office, said the UK and EU should "get on with reaching an agreement".

She added the government was "failing to deliver their promises" and warned that clinching a deal was "critical to the British national interest for jobs and security".

On Monday morning, the pound had fallen by more than two cents against the US dollar to just over $1.32 as investors grew more anxious about the possibility of a no-deal outcome.

It was a sharp reverse from market optimism over the talks last week which saw sterling climb above $1.35 for the first time this year.

However, the UK currency was trading above $1.33 in the wake of the joint statement - and just below €1.10.

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2020-12-07 19:18:45Z
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Pound sinks as UK-EU trade talks enter 'critical stage' - BBC News

Pound and euro coins
Getty Images

The pound has fallen to its lowest level against the euro in more than six weeks, as traders reacted to the growing prospect of a no-deal Brexit.

In late afternoon trading in London, sterling was about 1% down against the single European currency at €1.098.

It also lost ground against the dollar, falling 0.83% to $1.3325.

UK-EU trade talks have entered a critical stage as they bid to reach a post-Brexit deal before 31 December, when the UK's transition period ends.

Disputes over fishing and business rules remain, with the UK government saying discussions in Brussels have reached "a critical moment".

The EU mood was described as "gloomy" as chief negotiator Michel Barnier met UK counterpart Lord Frost.

EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier and his UK counterpart Lord Frost are still locked in talks.

Cabinet Office minister Penny Mordaunt told the House of Commons: "We are at a critical moment in the negotiations."

She added: "We are all working to get a deal, but the only way that's possible is if it's compatible with our sovereignty and takes back control of our country's trade and waters."

Asked when the cut-off point for a deal was, a European Commission spokesman said: "We are not going to speculate on a last-chance date.

"We are fully committed to substantial negotiations. We've always said and continue to say it's the substance that prevails over timing."

Earlier, Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney described the EU negotiating team's frame of mind as "gloomy" and "downbeat".

The FTSE 100 share index drifted in and out of positive territory during the day, and finished virtually flat at 6,555 points.

Investors are also awaiting an EU summit starting on Thursday to break an impasse over a 1.8 trillion-euro coronavirus aid package, as well as the last European Central Bank policy meeting of the year on the same day.

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2020-12-07 17:20:00Z
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