Boris Johnson calls on EU to act to find ‘landing zone’ for Brexit deal

Updated

Boris Johnson said he remained “cautiously optimistic” about the prospect of a Brexit deal despite the limited time available ahead of the scheduled October 31 withdrawal date.

The Prime Minister said the UK side had made some “pretty big moves” towards a deal but it was up to Brussels to respond to find the right “landing zone”.

Meanwhile, Chancellor Sajid Javid said a no-deal Brexit “may well happen” on October 31 despite a law aimed at preventing Mr Johnson from taking the UK out of the European Union without an agreement.

The Prime Minister said the October 31 date would be met “whatever happens”.

Speaking during a visit to a cash-and-carry business in Manchester, he said: “I’m cautiously optimistic. We have made some pretty big moves, we are waiting to see whether our European friends will help us and whether we can find the right landing zone.

“But whatever happens, we’ll come out on October 31.”

Mr Javid said he thinks he knows how the Prime Minister intends to achieve the October 31 withdrawal despite the restrictions of the Benn Act.

The law was rushed through Parliament to require the Prime Minister to seek a delay to Brexit if a deal has not been agreed by October 19, or if MPs have not agreed to leave the EU without one.

But there have been suspicions in pro-EU circles that the Prime Minister will try to avoid complying with the requirements.

Conservative Party Conference
Conservative Party Conference

The Chancellor told the BBC: “Of course, every government should observe all laws at all times.

“We’re taking a careful look at that law.”

He said there could be no more “dither and delay and we will leave if we have to without a deal on October 31”.

Asked if he knew how the Government would get around the Benn Act, he replied: “I think I do.

“The intention of the law is clear and I do think it has absolutely made it harder for the Government to get the deal that we all want to see. That said, it can still be done.

“It’s not about getting around the law… I don’t really want to discuss the detail of this law, it’s a pretty fresh new law, but we are also clear at all times we, of course, like any government, we will absolutely observe the law.”

The Chancellor said he was not sure how much a no-deal Brexit would cost the economy in the short term.

“I don’t think anyone really knows a full proper answer to that question.

“And I have never pretended that if you leave without a deal it won’t be challenging.”

DUP leader Arlene Foster, who said on Sunday she would look at the prospect of a time limit on the Irish backstop, said that was a “world of difference” away from actually agreeing to one.

Brexiteers including the Prime Minister have called for the contingency plan – which will avoid a hard border with Ireland by keeping the UK closely tied to Brussels’ rules – to be scrapped entirely.

But a time limit on the measure – if the EU could agree to it – would address one of their concerns, which is its indefinite nature.

Mrs Foster told a fringe meeting at the Conservative Party conference: “I didn’t say that we would accept that, I said that we would look at it – there is a world of difference.”

Eurosceptic Tory Mark Francois, one of the hardline Brexiteers nicknamed the Spartans, said he would not be forced to back a deal and the “acid test” would be whether it delivered on the commitment to actually leave the EU.

“If there is a deal, as a so-called Spartan, if it means that we genuinely leave the European Union at Halloween then I will be the first in the Aye lobby,” he told a fringe event.

“But if it really means we don’t, I will be against it and no amount of browbeating by anybody will make me change my mind.”

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