EU ministers warn against no-deal Brexit

EU ministers warn against no-deal Brexit

by Joseph Anthony
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson

European Union ministers on Thursday urged Britain to choose an orderly Brexit, with some openly expressing concern that Prime Minister Boris Johnsonโ€™s move to suspend parliament increased the risk of a chaotic split.

As EU foreign and defence ministers met in Helsinki, Johnsonโ€™s government challenged opponents in the British parliament to try to collapse it or change the law to stop Britainโ€™s departure from the bloc on Oct. 31.

โ€œWe still hope it will be possible to avoid a no-deal Brexit and we are looking forward to any proposals from the British government that fit into the Withdrawal Agreement,โ€ Dutch Foreign Minister Stephan Blok said. โ€œItโ€™s in nobodyโ€™s interest to see a no-deal Brexit.โ€

The British parliament has three times rejected the Withdrawal Agreement, the divorce deal agreed between Johnsonโ€™s predecessor Theresa May and Brussels, and Johnson has promised to renegotiate it or leave without an agreement at the end of October.

Johnsonโ€™s Brexit negotiator David Frost was in Brussels for talks with the executive European Commission on Wednesday, but Blok said the sides had not managed to bridge divisions.

โ€œI know that there have been serious talks in Brussels but we are not there yet,โ€ he said.

While most ministers avoided comment on the suspension of the British parliament, saying it was an internal matter, Austriaโ€™s Alexander Schallenberg said when asked if a hard Brexit was more likely because of the move: โ€œI fear so, yes.โ€

โ€œThe ball is in the UKโ€™s courtโ€ฆ We have done whatever is possible to ensure an orderly exit of Britain,โ€ he said. โ€œWhen the other side says thatโ€™s not possible, they need to say what the alternatives are, namely in substance.โ€

The EU wants Britain to find solutions to unlock ratification of their divorce treaty.

โ€œThe EU is united on the agreement, now itโ€™s up to the UK to decide on that,โ€ said Maltaโ€™s Carmelo Abela.

Johnsonโ€™s Defence Secretary Ben Wallace, in Helsinki, said of parliamentโ€™s suspension: โ€œIt happens every year.โ€

Johnson called a Queenโ€™s Speech โ€“ the formal state opening of a new parliament at which Queen Elizabeth reads out the governmentโ€™s priorities and legislative agenda โ€“ for Oct. 14.

While parliament is normally suspended for a few days ahead of a Queenโ€™s Speech, the move caused outrage because of its timing and the length of the shutdown, which Johnsonโ€™s opponents say is an attempt to limit parliamentโ€™s ability to derail his Brexit plans weeks before EU exit day.

Finland holds the EUโ€™s rotating presidency and was hosting the ministers on Thursday. Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto said: โ€œTo support Brexit with the deal is a key issue because otherwise we will face a lot of negative consequences to our economies and our border traffic.โ€

โ€œWe hope that the way this divorce will happen will not make it impossible that we have good cooperation afterwards,โ€ said Hungaryโ€™s Peter Szijjarto.

REUTERS

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