UK Brexit compromise talks fail, future hazy With May set to quit, Corbyn cites instability to strike deal
London, May 17: Talks between Britain’s government and Opposition aimed at striking a compromise Brexit deal broke down without agreement on Friday, plunging the country back into a morass of uncertainty over its departure from the European Union.
Opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said the talks with Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservative government had “gone as far as they can.”
In a letter to May released by Labour, Corbyn said “we have been unable to bridge important policy gaps between us.”
And with May set to announce within weeks that she plans to step down, Corbyn said the “increasing weakness and instability” of the government made striking a lasting agreement impossible.
Speaking on Friday, Mr Corbyn said “divisions within the Conservative Party mean it’s a government that is negotiating with no authority and no ability, that I can see, to actually deliver anything.”
The PM said on Friday she is considering a series of votes in Parliament on different Brexit options to see if any can gain majority backing. But she warned lawmakers will be at a crossroads.
“When MPs come to vote on the Bill they will be faced with a stark choice: that is to vote to ... deliver Brexit, or to shy away again from delivering Brexit with all uncertainty that that would leave.”
May’s spokesman, James Slack, confirmed that no further talks were planned with Labour.
“We have made real progress on some issues such as workers’ rights and environmental protections, but it is clear that we are not going to be able to reach a complete agreement,” he said.
The two sides have held weeks of negotiations to try to agree on terms for Brexit that can win support in Parliament. The talks began after lawmakers rejected May’s divorce deal with the EU three times.
But the Conservatives and left-of-centre Labour differ on how close an economic relationship to seek with the bloc after the UK leaves. Labour wants to stick close to EU rules in order to guarantee seamless trade, while the government wants a looser relationship that would leave Britain freer to strike new trade deals around the world.
Britain was due to leave the EU on March 29, but the bloc has extended the Brexit deadline until Oct. 31 amid the political impasse in the UK.
That deadlock has deepened this week with the breakdown of the crossparty talks and intensifying pressure on May from within the Conservative Party to quit. Pro-Brexit Conservatives are furious that Britain hasn’t yet left the EU, almost three years after voters backed Brexit in a referendum. Many blame May and want her replaced with a more staunchly pro-Brexit leader like former foreign secretary Boris Johnson.
On Thursday, May agreed to set out a timetable for her departure early next month, raising the prospect that Britain will get a new prime minister before it leaves the EU.
Her resignation, when it comes, will trigger a party leadership contest in which any Conservative lawmaker can run. The winner will become party leader and PM without the need for an election.