German business warns Theresa May over Brexit trade deal
Ministers have frequently claimed that German carmakers, along with other key European industries such as French farmers and winemakers, would lobby their governments to agree a comprehensive deal which maintains tariff-free trade between the UK and the other 27 EU member states.
But the leaders of two of Germany’s main business organisation said the priority for them was maintaining the integrity of the single market for the 27 remaining members of the European Union.
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Hide AdDieter Kempf, president of the BDI, the federation of German industries, told the Observer: “Defending the single market, a key European project, must be the priority for the European Union. Europe must maintain the integrity of the single market and its four freedoms: goods, capital, services, and labour.
“It is the responsibility of the British Government to limit the damage on both sides of the Channel. Over the coming months, it will be extraordinarily difficult to avert negative effects on British businesses in particular.”
Ingo Kramer, president of the confederation of German employers’ associations (BDA), told the newspaper: “The single market is one of the major assets of the EU. Access to the single market requires the acceptance of all four single market freedoms.
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Hide Ad“The UK will remain a very important partner for us, but we need a fair deal for both sides respecting this principle. The cohesion of the remaining 27 EU member states has highest priority.”
Their intervention comes after the Prime Minister received a boost at the G20 summit, with US President Donald Trump highlighting the prospect of a trade deal with the UK.
Mrs May said it was a “powerful vote of confidence” in Britain that Mr Trump and other world leaders have shown with their “strong desire” to strike new trade deals after Brexit.
The Prime Minister said she is “optimistic and positive” about a future pact with the US after the president said he believed an agreement could be reached “very, very quickly”.
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Hide AdFollowing talks on the margins of the summit in Hamburg, Mr Trump hailed the “very special relationship” he had developed with the PM.
He said he expected an agreement on new trading arrangements with Britain to be “very powerful”.
Mrs May insisted she was confident the UK would also secure a good deal with the EU “because it’s not just about what’s in the interests of the United Kingdom, it’s about what’s in the interests of the remaining 27 members states in the European Union and I think it is in the interests of both sides to have that good trade agreement”.
She added: “But I’m also optimistic about the opportunities that we will see in the rest of the world.
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Hide Ad“Some of the countries I have been talking to here who have shown great interest in working with us on trade arrangements in the future, the United States, Japan, China, India, these are all huge world economies.
“This is an important development for the United Kingdom and I look forward to developing those trade deals as well.”
In a sign of the difficulties Mrs May will face in Parliament getting her Brexit legislation through, three Tory former ministers hit out at her approach.
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Hide AdFormer attorney general Dominic Grieve and ex-education secretary Nicky Morgan attacked the red line Mrs May has put on allowing any role for the European Court of Justice (ECJ) after Brexit.
Mr Grieve told the Sunday Telegraph the Government should have an open mind on the issue: “We have to be realistic. Some of the attitudes to the ECJ seem to be a bit knee jerk. It has a pariah status.
“I’ve never been particularly impressed with it, but the fact is it is there and it’s going to be doing a lot of work that is relevant to us.”
Ms Morgan said: “There may be some merit in just thinking about the detail of our future relationship with the ECJ before we draw a line through the relationship entirely.”
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Hide AdTory former culture minister Ed Vaizey and senior Labour MP Rachel Reeves used a joint article in the Sunday Telegraph to criticise the decision to pull out of Euratom, the European civil nuclear regulator.