U.K., EU chiefs to talk on exit deal

Johnson voices optimism on impasse, but Juncker is cautious

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, giving a speech Friday in Rotherham, England, was interrupted by a heckler who urged Johnson to sort out “the mess” he created when he shut down Parliament.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, giving a speech Friday in Rotherham, England, was interrupted by a heckler who urged Johnson to sort out “the mess” he created when he shut down Parliament.

LONDON -- British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker will hold talks next week to try to break the Brexit impasse as both sides seek to avert a "no-deal" departure.

"There is the rough shape of the deal to be done," Johnson said Friday.

"I would say I'm cautiously optimistic" that a new agreement can be forged, Johnson said, even as officials warned against expecting any sudden breakthrough Monday.

Juncker told Germany's Deutschlandfunk radio in an interview to be broadcast Sunday that he was hoping for some alternative proposals but wasn't optimistic at resolving the stalemate.

Johnson, who traveled to the English town of Rotherham, was interrupted during a speech by a heckler angry at his decision to suspend Parliament for five weeks leading up to the Oct. 31 deadline for Britain's departure from the European Union.

The heckler urged Johnson to "get back to Parliament" to sort out "the mess that you have created."

Johnson and Juncker will meet in Brussels for a discussion expected to include new suggestions from Britain.

The meeting comes as lower-level Brexit negotiations have produced no visible signs of progress as the deadline nears, although EU negotiators say they believe Johnson is actively pursuing a deal.

The key stumbling block remains the so-called Irish backstop, a maneuver to prevent both sides from putting in a hard border between Ireland, which is in the EU, and Northern Ireland, which is part of the United Kingdom. British officials fear the backstop could keep Britain tied to EU rules and regulations even after it withdraws from the bloc.

Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar warned that the two sides are still very far apart despite recent reports of progress in the talks.

Monday's meeting will take place after Juncker's comments this week that Britons were only "part-time Europeans" since they joined the EU and were never fully in the bloc. He made these comments in an interview with Euronews.

"The British were told for more than 40 years that they were in, but they did not want to share all the policies that have been decided. The British, since the very beginning, were part-time Europeans, what we need are full-time Europeans," he said.

Juncker cautioned that Brexit would be a "lose-lose" situation for both the EU and the U.K.

Johnson's maneuvering room has been greatly limited even as his team tries to come up with a solution to the backstop problem.

He has repeatedly vowed to leave the EU on Oct. 31 with or without a deal, but Parliament has passed a law saying he must seek an extension to the deadline if no deal is reached by mid-October. Johnson has indicated he will not do so, although he has stopped short of explicitly saying he would ignore the law.

John Bercow, the retiring speaker of Britain's House of Commons, says Parliament is willing to take forceful actions to ensure the law designed to block a no-deal Brexit is followed. The influential speaker says he will allow "procedural creativity" in making sure Johnson does not violate the new law, which took effect this week.

Johnson has declared he would rather be "dead in a ditch" than delay Brexit again. Britain voted to leave the EU in a 2016 referendum but has not reached consensus on how to do so.

Bercow said in a speech Thursday night that Johnson must obey the law and that it is "astonishing" that any other course is being contemplated.

"It would be the most terrible example to set to the rest of society," he said.

Bercow plans to step down by the end of October.

The British government's own assessment suggests an abrupt departure from the EU's single market without an agreement risks severe economic problems and possible food and medicine shortages in Britain.

Parliament is currently suspended, or prorogued, for five weeks. Johnson's decision to suspend the legislative branch for such an extended period, however, has been ruled unlawful by a Scottish court and will be taken up by the U.K. Supreme Court on Tuesday.

Information for this article was contributed by Samuel Petrequin of The Associated Press.

photo

AP/JON SUPER

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson (center) speaks Friday with Jake Berry, minister of the Northern Powerhouse economic project, as they stop at a fish market during a visit to Doncaster, England. Johnson and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker are to meet next week in an attempt to end the Brexit stalemate.

A Section on 09/14/2019

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