U.K., EU frustrated by lack of progress
Each side thinks other has next Brexit move
LONDON — Prime Minister Theresa May said Monday there is a positive “new dynamic” in Brexit talks, with Britain and the European Union nearing agreement on the rights of 4 million citizens whose lives will be affected by the split.
May urged European Union officials to show “leadership and flexibility” in negotiations on Britain’s exit, saying “the ball is in their court.”
The EU, however, lobbed the ball straight back. European Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas said the responsibility for progress is “entirely in the U.K. court.”
A fifth round of divorce negotia- tions opened Monday in Brussels, with both sides frustrated by the lack of progress.
May told British lawmakers that “there is a new dynamic in the negotiations” since her major Brexit speech in Florence, Italy, last month.
In the Florence speech, May said Britain would be willing to abide by EU rules and pay into its coffers during a transition period of about two years after Brexit in 2019.
She also signaled Britain would pay what it owes to settle financial commitments it has made to the bloc.
EU leaders have called her suggestions positive but asked for more details. Few were forthcoming in May’s statement on Monday, though she did say that Britain might accept the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice during the transition period, an idea that infuriates many pro-brexit members of her Conservative Party.
The U.K is increasingly anxious to move talks on to discussing future trade relations, but so far the EU says there hasn’t been “sufficient progress” on the major divorce terms: the size of the Brexit bill, the status of the border between Ireland and Northern Ireland and the rights of 3 million EU citizens living in Britain and 1 million Britons in other member states.
Schinas, the EU spokesman, said “there has been so far no solution found on step one, which is the divorce proceedings.”
“So the ball is entirely in the U.K. court for the rest to happen,” he said.
Danish Foreign Minister Kristian Jensen, however, called for compromise, saying “this will never be a 100 percent win for one side or the other side.”