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'We found the best possible deal and we are not in a souk where we are going to bargain for the next five years'
The European Parliament has voted to ratify the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA), with 660 out of 697 MEPs voting in favour of the deal, but a Brexit expert has said it is only the beginning.
We spoke to the former Conservative Chancellor, Ken Clarke, about the budget and UK trade post-Brexit.
‘Same significant divergences persist’, EU negotiator says – with just 35 days left to avert a crash-out.
Boris Johnson to reveal whether negotiations are over – plunging trade with EU into turmoil in 19 days’ time
A wide-ranging free trade pact between the UK and Norway will have to be pushed back as Norway’s coalition government failed to reach an agreement today.
My former Conservative colleagues: ask yourselves what Boris Johnson has achieved, and heed the damning answer
We could end up with tonnes of fish that Brits don't even like and no way of selling them to the EU before they rot.
"Only as true friends can, I want to be very honest about what lies ahead of us." The words of the new European Commission president as she headed to Downing Street and her first face-to-face meeting with Boris Johnson on Wednesday.
If politics trump economics, neither Brussels nor London may have much incentive to get any agreement.
David Davis told me ... that the "row of the summer" would be ... the EU's desire to negotiate money we owe, the rights of migrants and Ireland's borders before talking about a trade deal. / Today, the Brexit secretary became the pussycat of the summer - in the eyes of Brussels - as he declared his pleasure that Brexit negotiations would indeed be in the sequence desired by the rest of the EU.
A political decision principally made by the prime minister alone will determine what sort of exit from the EU we start 2021 with.
Everyone is fishing in the same pond. Stocks built up in readiness for Brexit are having to be replenished. If another pandemic strikes, we’ll hardly be in the best position to get through it.
The dangerous threat of a no-deal Brexit will only rear its head again in six months time, just as we’re striving to save jobs and fix our economy. Even if we are able to reach a deal, it will fall short of what’s best for us.
Britain and the European Union will restart talks on Monday over their future relationship, with time running out to get an agreement after a six-week interruption caused by coronavirus.
These sticking points include fishing rights, rules on state subsidies for business and arrangements for policing any deal.
European commission chief picks out contradictions in UK approach to post-Brexit deal.
The most important Brexit event of the week came and went with relatively little fanfare, yet it marks a significant moment.
Negotiations with Brussels to drag on into the autumn — and there’s no sign a deal is imminent with Washington.