Theresa May calls on the EU to abandon its "rigid position" on Brexit – Observer



[ad_1]

British Prime Minister Teresa May calls on the European Union to abandon its "rigid position" in Brexit negotiations, according to an interview in The Sunday Times

Teresa May urges Brussels to consider its proposals in a "serious" way after Friday, the ministers agreed on a plan for future bilateral relations. This plan will apply after the 21-month transition period after the departure of the British from the EU, scheduled for March 29, 2019.

The plan, which includes the creation of a market Common for the British Conservative MPs, who threaten to destabilize their leadership, have criticized the organization, reported the British newspaper quoted by the British news agency Efe.

For parliamentarians who, according to the newspaper, are preparing a letter The leader says that the current challenge is "to get the EU to take the issue seriously and to sit down to negotiate with the British."

The chief executive also ensures that he will not do it "" The 52% of Britons who voted for "Belxit" in the referendum of June 23, 2016.

Pro-Congressmen led by aristocrat Jacob Rees-Mogg, lamented that and the plan that the government will present to the This week's EU in a white paper will equate to staying "bound to the bloc".

And they believe that this will complicate the conclusion of trade agreements with other countries. The Sunday Times explains that at last Friday's meeting at the official residence of Checkers' Field, where a consensus was reached, there were very dissident voices among ministers, although eventually everyone respected the majority decision.

Among the dissenting voices – mentioned in the paper – is Foreign Minister Boris Johnson, who said the "plan fears" and defended it would be "like polishing a shit".

In an article by Philip Hammond and Transport, Chris Grayling, insist that what was agreed at Checkers in southeastern England is pragmatic and principled.

Theresa May will explain her plan to the Conservative parliamentary group in the House of Commons on Monday, while party diplomats continue to meet with MPs to reach a consensus

Chief Negotiator of the House of Commons 39 EU, Michel Barnier, however stated that he was waiting for the reading of the White Paper to decide whether the British proposal was "viable and realistic"