Britain's top Brexit official said today that the UK would be able to strike new trade deals outside the European Union as soon as it leaves the bloc next year, even though it will remain bound to EU customs and market rules for some two years after 2019.
Brexit Secretary David Davis said that during a post-2019 transition period Britain would be free to negotiate "new trade deals with old friends and new allies around the world."
He said, though, that "they would not enter into force" until the transition period is over, likely by early 2021.
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Davis is trying to placate pro-Brexit lawmakers in Britain who accuse the government of being too timid in negotiations with the EU. Conservative legislator Jacob Rees- Mogg said Thursday that British negotiators had been "cowed" by the bloc.
British euroskeptics are angry that the UK will continue to abide by EU rules during the transition period, which is designed to give government and businesses time to prepare for life outside the bloc.
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