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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
World
Alex Morales

British prime minister urged to prepare for risk of a no-deal exit from EU

LONDON �� British Prime Minister Theresa May must plan for the "real possibility" that she emerges from two years of negotiations to leave the European Union without a deal, according to a panel of lawmakers.

May has warned that she is prepared to take Britain out of the EU with no agreement rather than accept a bad one. That could happen and it would be a "dereliction of duty" not to plan for the consequences, the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee said in a report Sunday.

"The possibility of no deal is real enough to require the government to plan how to deal with it," said Crispin Blunt, chairman of the cross-party committee. "But there is no evidence to indicate that this is receiving the consideration it deserves or that serious contingency planning is underway."

Under a no-deal exit, Britain could revert to World Trade Organization tariffs, disrupting the operations of exporters and importers alike. The nation would also need arrangements in place for such things as agricultural subsidies that are currently funded by the EU and computer systems that track immigration.

May has promised to trigger negotiations this month and the scene is set for a testy start, with Britain and the EU already at odds over the cost of exit. The EU puts the bill at as much as $64 billion. British Trade Secretary Liam Fox has rejected the notion of paying anything at all as "absurd."

There's also disagreement on the format of the talks, with Britain wanting to negotiate its future relationship in parallel with talks on departure arrangements, and EU officials saying the latter must be dealt with first.

The panel dismissed a comment in January by David Davis, secretary of state for exiting the European Union, that the consequences of not securing a deal were "an exercise in guesswork," saying that some implications are predictable. They include:

��Ongoing disputes over the exit bill. Uncertainty for U.K. citizens in the EU and European citizens who live in Britain.

��Trading on WTO terms. A "regulatory gap" as Britain transitions from a system of EU rules to domestic ones.The sudden return of a customs border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

Britain is "confident" it can reach a deal with the EU, including a trade pact, but "a responsible government should prepare for all potential outcomes," the Department for Exiting the European Union said in an email responding to the report. Davis "briefed the Cabinet last month on the need to prepare not just for a negotiated settlement, but for the unlikely scenario in which no mutually satisfactory agreement can be reached," it said.

Blunt said each department should be asked to produce a 'no deal' plan.

"Last year, the committee described the government's failure to plan for a Leave vote as an act of gross negligence: this government must not make a comparable mistake," he said.

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