Monday, June 1

Author: Sumon Admin

Strong possibility of no Brexit deal
Featured, United Kingdom

Strong possibility of no Brexit deal

    There is a strong possibility no free trade deal will be struck with the EU and the UK should be prepare to crash out with no-deal, Boris Johnson has warned. The prime minister told British citizens and businesses to make proper preparations for that scenario, which would come into effect on 1 January 2021 adding that the deal currently on the table isn't right for the UK. He insisted he would keep going and go the extra mile to try to strike a trade agreement with Brussels, but added he told cabinet ministers this afternoon to get on and make those preparations for no-deal. It came after Ursula von der Leyen said it would be difficult to reach a post-Brexit trade agreement, the European Union’s top official said as she stepped up no-deal planning. Ms von der Leye...
PM in Brussels for crunch talks
Featured, United Kingdom

PM in Brussels for crunch talks

    Boris Johnson has arrived in Brussels for crunch Brexit talks with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. In a tweet, the prime minister insisted the UK will prosper mightily as an independent nation irrespective of whether the two sides agree trading arrangements resembling those of Australia or Canada. His message was accompanied by a photo of him waving and holding a red despatch box as he boarded a plane in London. Before leaving Downing Street, the prime minister told the Commons that a good deal is there to be done with the EU on trade but says the bloc is currently insisting on terms which no prime minister could accept. German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said there is some chance that a deal could be reached, but warned it is unlikely that a ...
Questions raised over Royal tour
Featured, United Kingdom

Questions raised over Royal tour

    The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's decision to tour the UK despite coronavirus restrictions was further questioned today when Downing Street repeatedly refused to endorse the trip. The Prime Minister's official spokesman was asked five times whether he believed the three day rail journey was necessary or Covid-compliant. Each time, he simply replied that it was a matter for the palace, elaborating only to highlight the current guidelines by which the public had been asked to abide. Downing Street later appeared to backtrack, only adding to the confusion, insisting that Boris Johnson welcomed the morale boost the royal would provide. A No 10 spokesman swiftly added: The PM is delighted to see the warm reception the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have received on th...
PM to head to Brussels for talks
Featured, United Kingdom

PM to head to Brussels for talks

    Boris Johnson and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen have agreed to hold face-to-face talks within days in a bid to find a way through the Brexit deadlock. In a joint statement both sides said the conditions for a post-Brexit trade agreement were not there and that significant differences remained on fishing, the level playing field and governance. The announcement followed a lengthy phone call between the two, their second in as many days. Each side has asked their chief negotiators and their teams to prepare an outline of the remaining differences. These will be discussed in a physical meeting in Brussels in the coming days, they said. The decision paves the way for a final showdown between the two leaders later this week. A senior government so...
Brexit trade talks on ‘knife edge’
Featured, United Kingdom

Brexit trade talks on ‘knife edge’

    The EU backed down over post-Brexit fishing arrangements on Sunday night – but the chances of a trade deal remained on a knife edge, with other key issues unresolved. Sources in Brussels said talks on fish were closing in on a political agreement, but there were warnings that no progress had been made on the far bigger problem of the level playing field, meaning the two sides could still end the talks without a deal as early as Monday night. On Monday evening, Boris Johnson will speak to Ursula von der Leyen, the European Commission president, for the second time in 48 hours to decide whether to allow negotiations to continue into Tuesday or if there is no prospect of agreement to walk away for good. On Sunday night Michael Martin, the Irish prime minister, put the...
Brexit trade talks put on ‘pause’
Featured, United Kingdom

Brexit trade talks put on ‘pause’

    Brexit trade talks have been paused after negotiators in London and Brussels failed to reach an agreement, insisting that significant divergences still remain. Boris Johnson and Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, will discuss the state of play in a telephone call on Saturday with just weeks remaining until the end of the transition period. Despite suggestions of an “imminent” agreement, the UK government’s negotiator, Lord David Frost, and his EU counterpart, Michel Barnier, issued a joint statement on Friday evening offering a pessimistic assessment of the negotiations. We agreed today that the conditions for an agreement are not met, due to significant divergences on a level playing field, governance and fisheries, they said. We agre...
Chance of post-Brexit trade deal breakthrough ‘receding’, UK warns
Featured, United Kingdom

Chance of post-Brexit trade deal breakthrough ‘receding’, UK warns

    Talks on a post-Brexit trade deal have suffered a blow, with the UK accusing the European Union of making fresh demands at the 11th hour. The UK’s current trading arrangements with the bloc expire at the end of the month, leaving little time to get a deal agreed by negotiators and approved by the EU’s leaders, Westminster and the European Parliament. Hopes of an imminent deal appear to be fading after Thursday’s negotiations in London between the teams led by Lord Frost and the EU’s Michel Barnier. A senior UK Government source said: At the 11th hour, the EU is bringing new elements into the negotiation. A breakthrough is still possible in the next few days but that prospect is receding. Meanwhile, Boris Johnson will press ahead with plans allowing ministers to te...
How many people need a vaccination for herd immunity?
Featured, United Kingdom

How many people need a vaccination for herd immunity?

    After nearly nine months of coronavirus restrictions, there may be a light at the end of the tunnel. The UK is the first country in the world to approve Pfizer’s jab for widespread use, with the NHS standing ready to begin immunising care home residents and staff next week. With an effective vaccine long been hailed a route back to life as we knew it, many are undoubtedly wondering how many people have to receive the jab to achieve herd immunity, freeing us of future lockdowns. Herd immunity occurs when an infection cannot take hold in a community. It can come about in two ways if a sufficient number of people have overcome a virus and are now immune, or via vaccination. In March, the UK’s chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance told ITV News: When you look ...
Boris Johnson must be honest about risk of third lockdown…
Featured, United Kingdom

Boris Johnson must be honest about risk of third lockdown…

    A Labour MP has demanded Boris Johnson come clean about the risk of a third lockdown and accused the PM of not giving the public the full story on how effective the new tiered lockdown system will be. In a heated exchange in the House of Commons, Chris Bryant MP said that he thought it was almost certainly going to go back into lockdown in January. In response to Tory MP Desmond Swayne challenging the Labour's decision not to back tonight's vote confirming the restrictions, despite backing moves to contain the virus, Mr Bryant suggested that MPs were sick of the PM telling porkies. Mr Bryant said: A lot of us are concerned that the prime minister doesn't give the full story to the house and the nation. The truth is we are almost certainly going to see another lockd...
Brexit: EU nations getting impatient
Europe, Featured

Brexit: EU nations getting impatient

    European Union governments are getting impatient over the lack of progress in the Brexit negotiations, Angela Merkel said on Monday. The German Chancellor said that Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission was getting increasingly involved in the trade talks in a sign they were entering the endgame. She said the negotiations, which remain deadlocked over the critical issues of fishing, level playing field guarantees and the deal’s enforcement were difficult and challenging. Some member states are getting a little impatient, Mrs Merkel said in an online event, there’s not much time left. She added that her fellow EU leaders wanted a trade deal but not at any price. In Madrid, France’s Europe minister warned that Paris would not allow French fi...