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U.K.'s Brexit Trade Stance Leaves Irish PM "Confused And Puzzled"

By Steve Wynne-Jones
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U.K.'s Brexit Trade Stance Leaves Irish PM "Confused And Puzzled"

Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said he remains “confused and puzzled” about the U.K.’s global trading plans after Brexit, as the clock ticks down in talks on the terms of Britain’s exit from the European Union.

The U.K. government seems to be suggesting it wants all the advantages of being in the EU, but none of the responsibilities and costs, Varadkar said in an interview Monday with Bloomberg Television in Toronto.

“That’s not a realistic position,” Varadkar said in the interview. “What trade agreement does the U.K. want with the EU? At the moment, they have the best trade deal imaginable. What are these better deals the U.K. really wants from Europe and other countries? Some more clarity would be helpful.”

No Border

Varadkar repeated he wants no border on the island of Ireland after Brexit. Checks along the 500-kilometer (310-mile) crossing to Northern Ireland largely melted away after a peace agreement in the 1990s, and the Irish government is demanding the frontier remains open after Brexit.

The bloc’s chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier maintains customs controls are part of EU border management, and French farmers are already objecting to an open border because of worries that cheaper non-European imports will enter the EU via the U.K.

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Varadkar is due to make a visit Tuesday to the U.S-Canada border, which has been cited by some Brexit supporters as a “seamless and frictionless” border and possible model for the Irish frontier.

“I’m a little bit skeptical,” he said.“But I’d like to see it with my own eyes.”

Key Issues

The border is one of three key issues, along with citizens’ rights and money owed by the U.K., that require “sufficient progress” toward a resolution during the Brexit negotiations before the EU will allow talks to move on to Britain’s future relationship with the bloc.

Varadkar said that there had been some progress on the Irish border issue, but more needed to be done in all three areas before talks moved to a wider basis.

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“We’re not satisfied with the progress that has been made so far,” Varadkar said. “We hope more progress can be made, but to date progress has not been sufficient.”

Varadkar is on a four-day trip to Canada and met Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Montreal Sunday after the two leaders marched together in a Pride Parade.

News by Bloomberg, edited by ESM. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: The European Supermarket Magazine.

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