}

Britain and the European Union are on the cusp of a Brexit deal which could be clinched in the next 24 to 48 hours, Prime Minister Theresa Mayโ€™s de facto deputy said on Tuesday.

Britain's Minister for the Cabinet Office David Lidington arrives in Downing Street, London
Britain’s Minister for the Cabinet Office David Lidington arrives in Downing Street, London, Britain, November 13, 2018. REUTERS/Simon Dawson

While officials choreograph the biggest divorce deal in EU history, it remains unclear whether May can get a deal through parliament where opponents have warned she is betraying Brexit by signing up the United Kingdom to EU subjugation.

โ€œWeโ€™re not quite there yet,โ€ Cabinet Office Minister David Lidington told BBC radio. โ€œWe are almost within touching distance now.โ€

Asked if he was saying it was possible there could be a deal in the next 24 or 48 hours, he said: โ€œStill possible but not at all definite, I think pretty much sums it up. Cautiously optimistic.โ€

Sterling jumped half a percent to as high as $1.2917ย GBP=D3ย on Lidington’s comments.

The EU wants to get agreement on a draft deal by the end of Wednesday at the latest if there is to be a summit this month to approve it. EU diplomats said they didnโ€™t have high hopes of a breakthrough this week.

The EU and the United Kingdom need an agreement to keep trade flowing between the worldโ€™s biggest trading bloc and the fifth largest national economy.

But May has struggled to untangle nearly 46 years of membership without damaging trade or upsetting the lawmakers who will ultimately decide the fate of any deal she can secure.

โ€˜TEMPORARY AND NOT INDEFINITEโ€™

With under five months until Britain leaves the EU, the so-called Northern Irish backstop is the main outstanding issue.

It is an insurance policy to avoid a return to controls on the border between the British province of Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland if a future trading relationship is not agreed in time.

Asked if the UK could be trapped in a backstop against its will, Lidington said: โ€œThe prime minister has said again and again, if the backstop were ever to be used – we donโ€™t want it to be used – … itโ€™s clearly got to be something that would be temporary and not indefinite.โ€

But the intricacies of any deal, hammered out in late night sessions at the European Commissionโ€™s modernist Berlaymont building in Brussels, are unlikely to change the growing opposition to May.

By seeking to leave the EU while preserving the closest possible ties, Mayโ€™s compromise plan has upset Brexiteers, pro-Europeans, Scottish nationalists, the Northern Irish party that props up her government, and some of her own ministers.

โ€œNo one is fooled by this theater. Delay after staged-managed delay,โ€ former foreign secretary Boris Johnson said. โ€œA deal will be reached and it will mean surrender by the UK.โ€

Johnson, a prominent Brexit campaigner who resigned from Mayโ€™s government in July over her strategy, said the deal would turn Britain into a colony of the EU.

Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab said he was confident of progress in talks, though he gave no further details.

Lidington, who voted to stay in the EU in the 2016 referendum, declined to say whether the proposed deal would make the United Kingdom wealthier or poorer, saying that the people had decided to leave the EU.

Asked whether Britain would have to start preparing in earnest for a โ€œno-dealโ€ Brexit if an agreement were not clinched by the end of Wednesday, as newspapers have reported, he said: โ€œIโ€™m not going to ascribe days to particular actions.โ€ (Reuters)


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