24 Hours To Save EU Summit As Negotiators Scramble to Break Deadlock
Negotiators have just 24 hours left to resolve outstanding issues with the Brexitdeal if a summit on Sunday is to go ahead, Brussels has warned.
A senior EU official said on Wednesday that time was running out to produce a final text in time for the planned summit, with last-minute concerns around fishing rights and Gibraltar threatening to sink the plan.
Though Britain and the European Commission struck a draft withdrawal agreement and future relationship plan last week, a number of member states have raised significant concerns with the proposals at the last hurdle and declined to sign off.
European Commission Vice-President Valdis Dombrovskis told reporters in Brussels that a final agreement would have to be done before a key meeting of national officials on Friday at the latest, if it was to be ready for the Sunday summit.
“We will need to have agreed beforehand on the political declaration on the future relationship and we are not there yet,” he said, addressing the issue of the summit.
“Sherpas are due to meet on Friday. Of course they will need to see a final text before then and the Commission stands ready to consider the text and take any action at any time.”
Asked if Sunday's special EU summit to sign off the Brexit deal could be cancelled because of ongoing talks deadlock, the prime minister's spokesman said: "A summit has been called, an agenda has been published and we look forward to attending."
Theresa May travelled to Brussels on Wednesday evening to meet with Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker in the hope of resolving the impasse – though expectations of a breakthrough on the day were low.
The Prime Minister is under pressure at home from MPs in her own party who see the deal as too tough on Britain, but in Brussels she is also facing opposition from member states who feel the EU has given away too much already. A failure to gain more concessions from Europe is expected to see her Cabinet again rocked by yet more resignations.
Spain in particular has raised concerns about Gibraltar’s treatment under the draft plan, while other member states such as France, Denmark, Spain, Portugal and the Netherlands are concerned that the Commission did not secure access for their fishing fleets to British waters.
The fishing section of the agreement commits the EU and UK to negotiating a fishing agreement by July 2020, during the transition period. But the group of discontent member state, led by France, is concerned that the EU has given Britain access to the benefits of the customs union through the Northern Ireland backstop without securing access for its fleets first.
The situation is particularly sensitive because Brexiteers back in the UK also want to re-open the deal, but have been told they cannot do so. Re-opening it to make it harsher on Britain would likely enrage them further – and add to the 70+ Tory MP who have now suggested they cannot vote for the plan.
Diplomats familiar with the situation suggested the changes could be accommodated by so-called “side-declarations” that would avoid reopening talks on the agreement but give clear stipulations about how the EU expected the legal text to be interpreted.
Aside from the fishing issue, Spain has doubled down on demanding concessions for Gibraltar, with prime minister Pedro Sanchez warning: “If there are no changes regarding Gibraltar, Spain will vote No to the agreement on Brexit.”
The country takes issue with a clause added to the withdrawal agreement at the last minute – article 184. The article says the EU and the UK will seek to “negotiate rapidly the agreements governing their future relationship” before the end of the transition.
But Spain wants an addition to the text specifying that Gibraltar will not be covered by that agreement, and that it is for Spain and Britain to negotiate the future of the territory bilaterally.
Neither side appears willing to give ground on the issue, with Theresa May telling MPs on Wednesday: “Gibraltar is covered by our exit negotiations … We are seeking a deal that works for the whole UK family and that deal must work for Gibraltar too.”
The withdrawal agreement must be approved by a qualified majority vote of the European Council, meaning Spain alone cannot sink the deal without the support of other countries – though it could cause serious trouble down the line and veto a future trade agreement if the issue is not resolved now.
If Spain and the fishing states joined forces, they would have the numbers to block the agreement.
Spain has long resented Britain’s claims on Gibraltar, a British overseas territory that is home to around 30,000 people, and has previously threatened to use Brexit to wrest concessions on the issue.
The upsurge in interest in the Gibraltar issue could be down to the fact that the Spanish region of Andalusia has local elections scheduled for 2 December – just a week after the final Brexit summit.
Andalusia borders Gibraltar, and includes the county of Camp de Gibraltar – or “countryside of Gibraltar”. Around 10,000 Spanish people cross the border into the British overseas territory every day to work, so their livelihoods are connected to Brexit talks.
The European Commission is keen that the Sunday summit be little more than a glorified rubber-stamp, with the deal having been signed off before hand – but there is a danger it could turn into negotiating session of its own.
Diplomatic sources reported by the Bloomberg news agency however say that German chancellor Angela Merkel is not expected to turn up at the summit unless a deal is already finalised before hand. The ultimatum is being interpreted as a warning that a deal must be done in advance and that there will be no late-night sessions of face-to-face negotiations between leaders.
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