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UK and EU leaders struggle on trade deal

trade deal

Officials had played down the significance of the phone call, but a European source said they were seeking to clear a blockage

EU chief Ursula von der Leyen and Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson failed to find a breakthrough in post-Brexit trade talks Thursday despite a crisis call.

With the European Parliament insisting it must see a text of any trade deal within three days if it is to ratify it, the leaders picked up the phone to seek a way through.

Afterwards, von der Leyen was pessimistic.

We welcomed substantial progress on many issues, yet big differences remain to be bridged, in particular on fisheries, she said. Bridging them will be very challenging. Negotiations will continue tomorrow.

Officials had publicly played down the significance of the “stock taking” call, but a European source close to the negotiations said they were seeking to “clear a blockage, because we’re very blocked”.

Another European official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP: It’s very complicated on the fish. That’s what the deal hangs on. We’re still a long way off on fish.

In London, a Downing Street spokesperson said: The Prime Minister underlined that the negotiations were now in a serious situation, time was very short and it now looked very likely that agreement would not be reached unless the EU position changed substantially.

The call came after the main political groups in the European Parliament warned that if they do not see the text of a deal by Sunday they will not be able to ratify it before Britain leaves the EU single market on December 31.

Brussels’ chief negotiator Michel Barnier told MEPs a deal could come as early as Friday, but admitted this would be “difficult”, with fisheries still a sticking point.

Senior UK minister Michael Gove, speaking after video talks with EU Vice President Maros Sefkovic, was more gloomy, putting the odds of a breakthrough at “less than 50 percent”.

But both sides seem to be manoeuvring to manage public expectations and to secure last minute advantages, even as the outlines of a hard-won agreement begin to fall into place.

A senior European diplomat said member states saw a more flexible timetable, amid suggestions they could give any deal provisional approval if parliament runs out of time.

I believe there is still a chance in the next couple of days, but clearly, we are not there yet, he said. Don’t despair, there is still a bit of time.

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