Thursday, June 28, 2018

EU SUMMIT LIVE: 'We'll act AT PACE' May demands PRIVATE talks with Franco-German power duo

EU SUMMIT LIVE: 'We'll act AT PACE' May demands PRIVATE talks with Franco-German power duo


ANGELA Merkel and Emmanuel Macron are gearing up to gang up against Theresa May in a joint Brexit offensive, with EU leaders warning time is running out.

            Angela Merkel and Emmanuel Macron have arrived for the EU Summit i Brussels

The German Chancellor said she and the French President now have “commonality”, after coming to an agreement on eurozone reforms.

Theresa May is in Brussels for the first day of the EU Summit, to reassure leaders her plans are coming along, in what is seen as crunch time with the October deadline for the final draft Brexit proposal looming.

Mr Macron's aide said this morning there is a "serious and grave" rebuke planned for Britain.
On the doorsteps of the EU Summit, the Netherlands Prime Minister Mark Rutte said: “Time is getting on. We don’t have much longer. It is difficult co come to agreements in our cabinet but she has to.

“The first problem is the Irish border. We need a backstop that is not temporary it is continuous. That issue has to be solved.

“I don’t want to talk in apocalyptic terms. But first, second and third priority is the Irish border."
Ireland’s Taoiseach, Leo Varadkar, told reporters: “We will not prepare for a hard border in Ireland.”

The Prime Minister will hold a number of face-to-face meetings with European leaders on day one of the two-day summit, with the remaining 27 EU leaders discussing Brexit on their own on Friday morning, by which point Mrs May will have left Brussels.

Chief EU Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier said "serious divergences" remain over the question of backstop arrangements for the Irish border if neither of the UK's proposed customs proposals are deemed workable.

And crisis talks are also set to be dominated by the migrant crisis which threatens German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s future.

In Germany there is growing political uncertainty after Mrs Merkel’s interior minister Horst Seehofer gave her two weeks to reform migration or he would push through plans to turn migrants away at the border.

LIVE UPDATES FROM THE EU SUMMIT BELOW

3.30pm: Juncker issues Brexit warning
Jean-Claude Juncker isn't happy. After earlier saying he won’t “lecture” Theresa May, he tells her to get her cabinet in order for the sake of negotiations.

He said: “I would like our British friends to make clear their positions.

“We can’t go on with a split cabinet, they have to say what they want.”

2.41pm: Theresa May received a Belgium football shirt ahead of tonight's World Cup match
Theresa May has been presented with a Belgium football shirt ahead of tonight's World Cup match between England and the Belgian national side.

1.03pm update: Mateusz Morawiecki  urges tougher EU border controls
Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said Poland would be pushing for tougher external border controls to stop secondary migrations from third countries.

Speaking as he arrived for the summit, Mr Morawiecki also said he supported the continuation of sanctions against Poland’s next-door neighbour Russia and said the creation of a eurozone budget should not endanger the wider EU budget.

12.50pm update: European leaders have begun arriving in Brussels
Hungarian PM Viktor Orban, Bulgarian delegates and officials from Czech Republic and Finland have also arrived.

12.32pm update: Nigel Farage warans against Brexit betrayalFormer UKIP leader Nigel Farage said delaying Brexit would be an “absolute betrayal”.
He said: “This referendum that we had back in 2016 was about whether we become an independent country. That’s what people voted for.

“What the Government needs to do is to come up with a radical new plan and needs to start getting European business on their side.

“Clearly it should be in the interests of the European Union to have a sensible trade deal with us because they sell us more than we sell them.

“They are not behaving that way, I think we have got to try some different tactics, we have got to be a lot more radical, but the British Government needs to get European businesses, car manufactures in Germany, for example, we have got to get them on our side against what Michel Barnier is doing.
“The only crumb of comfort for people that voted to leave, is that we appear to be on track - given Royal Assent was given this week to the EU Withdrawal Bill.

We appear to be on track to leave at 11pm on March 29 next year.
“Everything else we are pretty unhappy about.

“Whether it is taking back fisheries, whether it's being free to make our own trade deals, whether it is taking back control of our borders.

“The only crumb of comfort was leaving on the 29 March, and frankly, if that gets delayed, that will be betrayal, no other word for it.”

12.22pm update: Slovak Prime Minister Peter Pellegrini tells EU to protect its borders
Slovak Prime Minister Peter Pellegrini has put the cat among the pigeons in Brussels by declaring the EU’s main priority was to “protect its external borders”.

He said: "The biggest priority in this moment is to protect our external border. First we have to start to do this and after that we can continue to discuss about was is happening inside the European Union."

12.01pm update: Spain's Pedro Sanchez looking forward to 'tete-a-tete' with Theresa May
Mr Sanchez said: "We will have a tete-a-tete meeting with Prime Minister May and look forward to continue with the negotiations and with this constructive approach that the Spanish government is having."

When asked of he was disappointed with the slow progress on Brexit he replied: "No, I won't say that. Absolutely not."

11.53am update: Xavier Bettel calls for agreement on immigration
Luxembourg Prime Minister Xavier Bettel said the EU had to thrash out a policy of legal immigration.

He said: ”I think we have to discuss everything. If we have countries saying this and that is a red line we will never get an agreement. Legal immigration has to be the rule."

"There are so many people who arrived in different countries and then made their way to Germany. I understand Germany says 'Why do we have to deal with everything?'"

11.47am update: Finnish leader offers support to Angela Merkel
Finnish Prime Minister Juha Sipila said is country was ready to co-operate with Germany on its migration proposals.

He said: “We have practical problems on secondary migration in Finland and Finland is ready to co-operate with Germany."

11.42am update: Pedro Sanches calls for show of solidarity with 'crisis-hit' Germany
Spain’s new Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has called on European Union member states to show solidarity to Germany which he said was "suffering a political crisis”.

He said: "What we need is a common response to a common challenge, which is migration and we have to combine responsibility with solidarity.

“Responsibility in order to control our frontiers, to intensify our foreign and external dimension of the migration policy.

“And solidarity also with regards to other countries especially Germany which is now suffering a political crisis."

11.29am update: Viktor Orban fires warnining shots over migrant crisis solution
Hungary’s hardman leader Viktor Orban has insisted democracy in Europe tops the summit agenda rather than the migrant crisis.

Mr Orban, whose anti-immigration rhetoric and refusal to toe the Brussels line on refugees, has enraged fellow EU leaders said:  "The main issue is not migration, the issue is democracy in Europe.
“It is about what the people believe, what should be done."

11.03am update: Commons Brexit committee calls or departure to be delayed
The influential Commons Brexit Committee has called for Britain’s departure from he EU to be delayed.

The committee said, even under the most optimistic scenario, there may not be enough time to complete all the necessary work by next March when the UK is scheduled to leave the EU.

In a report, they repeated calls for an extension to the exit timetable if an agreement has not been finalised and called for the Government to secure a mechanism which would also allow for any transition period to be extended.

10.46am update: Donald Tusk fears for future of relations with US
European Council President Donald Tusk made his fears for NATO crystal clear in a letter to the 28 EU leaders.

He wrote: “Despite our tireless efforts to keep the unity of the West, transatlantic relations are under immense pressure due to the policies of President Trump.

“Unfortunately, the divisions go beyond trade. I will share with you my political assessment of where things stand. It is my belief that, while hoping for the best, we must be ready to prepare our union for worst-case scenarios.”

10.21 update: Theresa May urges united front against Russian threat
Theresa May will call on EU leaders to strengthen defences against Russian efforts to undermine Western unity.

She will tell the summit: “Russia and other actors seem to be trying to sow disunity, destabilise our democracies and test our resolve.

“We must adapt our current defences to the ‘new normal’ and take responsibility for protecting international norms and institutions.”

10.03 update: French warn Theresa May to expect rebuke over lack of progress 
French officials have warned Theresa May faced a “serious and grave” warning from fellow EU leaders about the slow progress being made on Brexit.

An aide to Emmanuel Macron said Mrs May would be rebuked over the insufficient progress, particularly on Ireland.

The aide said: “It is very urgent to finalise discussions.”

9.38am update: Merkel calls for further eurozone reform
Angela Merkel said further eurozone reform is needed to nip possible future crises in the bud after aid programmes to some member states had been successful.

She said: "The Greek programme, like others, was a huge challenge but we can say the euro is stable, the programmes are over and the countries are competitive and this was a good piece of work and a good bit of European solidarity.

"But there is still a need to reform. That is why we agreed with France to work together.”
Ms Merkel said proposals included developing the European Stability Fund into a kind of European monetary fund to help avoid potential crises.

9.19am update: Merkel urges united front on migrant crisis
Angela Merkel has warned that failure to reach agreement on an EU migrant policy could be “make-or-break” for the bloc.

She said if all 28 members could not agree she would call for the creation of a coalition of the willing.

Ms Merkel also said Brussels had to better manage onward migration across EU borders and urged officials to seek agreements with African governments as they did with Turkey.

8.57am update: Shares open down ahead of EU Summit
European shares have again succumbed to trade tensions and political concerns ahead of the tense European Union summit after the stock market enjoyed a brief respite from selling in the previous session.

The pan-European STOXX 600 was down 0.1 percent while Germany's trade-sensitive DAX managed a 0.1 percent gain.

Financials and mining shares were the biggest drags on the market, while high dividend-paying consumer staples stocks such as Nestle and Unilever, considered safer in times of market stress, made gains.

The pan-European banks sector fell 0.3 percent, extending its sharp losses this week with HSBC, UBS and Credit Suisse among the biggest fallers. Miners declined 0.6 percent.

8.36am update: Donald Trump in bizarre outburst against EU
US President Donald Trump has launched a bizarre broadside at the EU ahead of the Brussels gathering.

He told a rally in North Dakota: “We love the countries of the European Union but the European Union, of course, was set up to take advantage of the United States. To attack our piggy bank.

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