Briton upbeat over EU-exit talks with party

Philip Hammond, U.K. chancellor of the exchequer, arrives in Downing Street in London on March 29, 2019. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Simon Dawson.
Philip Hammond, U.K. chancellor of the exchequer, arrives in Downing Street in London on March 29, 2019. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Simon Dawson.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond said the British government and the main opposition party agree on the fundamentals of Britain's withdrawal from the European Union and stand a good chance of making a breakthrough in the "next few weeks."

Talks with the Labor Party aimed at finding a new exit consensus will continue next week, while Parliament is in recess, and the government hasn't set red lines for these negotiations, Hammond said.

There have been disagreements about the priorities and approach, but "we agree on the fundamentals," Hammond told reporters in Washington. "We're in with a good chance of being able to reach an agreement on a way forward over the next few weeks."

However, Hammond also warned that if the two sides can't find a compromise, he may need to cut short a three-year spending review -- set to start in the summer -- aimed at ending austerity.

"If we don't have a deal done, the level of uncertainty that will remain probably makes it inappropriate to do a long-term spending review," he said.

Hammond has promised a boost for cash-strapped departments, but only if he can release money kept back in case of a no-deal Brexit. He's projected to have a $35 billion buffer against his fiscal mandate next year, which could be used to increase budgets for education, health care and policing -- if the U.K. leaves the EU with an agreement.

The government has promised to end almost a decade of spending cuts that boosted support for the anti-austerity Labor Party, costing the ruling Conservatives their parliamentary majority at the 2017 general election.

Prime Minister Theresa May was forced to open the door to negotiations with Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn after Parliament repeatedly rejected the exit terms she negotiated with Brussels.

She hinted in Parliament on Thursday that staying in a customs union was a possible compromise, as she said the two sides agreed on more than it often appeared. She has previously ruled out staying in the EU's customs regime as it would prevent the U.K. having its own independent trade policy.

Britain was to leave the EU on March 29, but has twice had to ask the bloc's other 27 leaders for an extension. The latest plan, agreed this week at a summit in Brussels, is for the U.K. to depart the bloc by Oct. 31.

Though Hammond has described a second EU-exit referendum as a "coherent proposition," he said Friday that he was skeptical the new date gave enough time to hold one because it would take about six months to organize. He played down reports the EU set the deadline with another plebiscite in mind.

"If that had been your motive, you would have given longer than October because that looks very tight," he said.

Hammond lamented that the political uncertainty over the exit had damaged Britain's reputation "as a bastion of democracy." As well as delaying business investment, he said some prospective candidates to replace Bank of England head Mark Carney, who is to step down in January, would be deterred by the fact that the exit hasn't been resolved.

"We've got a bit of work to do to recover our reputation as cool, calm and collected," Hammond said.

A Section on 04/13/2019

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