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Theresa May Hosts EU Leaders as Brexit Positions Harden

Theresa May Hosts EU Leaders as Brexit Positions Harden
folder_openUnited Kingdom access_time6 years ago
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Local Editor

British Prime Minister Theresa May Wednesday holds her first talks with key EU Brexit negotiators, as the bloc hardens its position ahead of a summit to lay down its "red lines".

Theresa May Hosts EU Leaders as Brexit Positions Harden

May hosts European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and chief negotiator Michel Barnier at Downing Street for the first face-to-face talks since she triggered the two-year process of withdrawing from the European Union.

The encounter over dinner comes as the EU toughened its strategy, making new demands over financial services, immigration and the bills Britain must settle before ending its 44-year-old membership in the bloc.

The latest draft negotiating guidelines, agreed on Monday by Barnier and European diplomats, point to months of difficult talks ahead as the EU seeks to ensure Britain does not get a better deal outside the bloc than inside.

According to the document, seen by AFP, the other 27 EU countries will seek to hold Britain liable for the bloc's costs for at least a year after it leaves in 2019 -- longer than was previously proposed.

Britain will also be required to give EU citizens permanent residency after living there for five years, in a challenge for May's Conservative government, which has vowed to limit immigration.

And the guidelines recommend that Britain's dominant finance industry will not necessarily be tied to any future trade deal with the EU and that it must also stick to the bloc's rules if it wants easy access to EU markets.

May committed to pulling Britain out of Europe's single market to end free movement of EU citizens into Britain, but says she wants to form a new partnership with the bloc.

"We will have difficult issues to confront. Compromises will be necessary on both sides. We know all this," Brexit minister David Davis said in a speech in London Wednesday.

But he added: "The UK has a very good reason to feel optimistic."

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

 

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