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Brexit on October 31 a 'priority' for British government: Queen Elizabeth

After weeks of gloom, the last few days have given a glimmer of hope that an agreement can be reached

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II
AFP | PTI London
3 min read Last Updated : Nov 05 2019 | 1:54 PM IST
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson repeated on Monday that Britain must leave the EU on October 31, as divorce talks resumed in Brussels in a pivotal week that could define how and when Brexit finally happens. In an elaborate ceremony in parliament, Queen Elizabeth II set out Johnson’s legislative programme for the coming year, with leaving the EU top of the agenda. “My government’s priority has always been to secure the UK’s departure from the EU on October 31,” she said in a speech in the upper House of Lords.
 
“My government intends to work towards a new partnership with the EU, based on free trade and friendly cooperation.” But this depends on the outcome of closed-door discussions in Brussels, where officials are racing to reach a deal on Britain's exit terms before a summit of EU leaders starting on Thursday.

If he cannot get a deal by Saturday, Johnson will fall foul of a British law demanding he ask the EU to delay Brexit for a third time rather than risk a potentially disastrous "no deal" departure.
 
"A deal is possible and it's possible this month," Irish Deputy Prime Minister Simon Coveney said as he arrived for talks with EU foreign ministers in Luxembourg.
 
"It may even be possible this week but we're not there yet." Michel Barnier, the bloc's chief Brexit negotiator, briefed EU ambassadors late Sunday after a weekend of talks between officials described as "intense" and "constructive".

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After weeks of gloom, the last few days have given a glimmer of hope that an agreement can be reached but there has so far been no decisive breakthrough. Barnier warned on Sunday that "a lot of work remains to be done".
 
This message echoed by Johnson's spokesman in London, who said on Monday: "The talks are constructive but there is a lot of work still to do." More than three years after the 2016 referendum vote to leave the EU, divorce talks remain stuck on how to avoid customs checks between British Northern Ireland and Ireland.
 
After British MPs rejected a previous plan, Johnson put forward fresh proposals earlier this month -- but they have been met with a cool response in Brussels. Johnson took over from his predecessor Theresa May in July vowing no more delays, after she postponed Brexit twice in a failed attempt to get her own divorce deal through the British parliament.

But he has no majority in the House of Commons, leaving him powerless even to call an election without the support of opposition parties. In a statement issued alongside Queen Elizabeth II's speech, Johnson said the British public were "tired of stasis, gridlock and waiting for change".
 
It was time to leave the EU and seize new opportunities, "to tear away that bureaucratic red tape, to set our own rules, and to release the talent, creativity, innovation and chutzpah that exists in every corner of our United Kingdom".

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Topics :BrexitEuropean Union

First Published: Oct 14 2019 | 4:40 PM IST

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