EU Parliament ‘could sit between Christmas and New Year' to ratify Brexit deal

world
Eu Parliament ‘Could Sit Between Christmas And New Year' To Ratify Brexit Deal
Brexit, © PA Wire/PA Images
Share this article

By Harriet Line, PA Deputy Political Editor, in Brussels

The European Parliament could sit between Christmas and New Year’s Eve to ratify a post-Brexit trade deal between the UK and EU, a senior German MEP has said.

David McAllister, of the parliament’s UK co-ordination group, said that a no-deal outcome would have “severe consequences” for both sides amid crunch negotiations.

Advertisement

He said MEPs would be “flexible” to ensure any agreement is ratified before the transition period ends on December 31, but that they would probably need 48 hours to scrutinise and vote on a deal.

In an interview in Brussels, Mr McAllister said: “The European Parliament needs sufficient time to scrutinise an agreement and as long as there is no agreement there is no text.

We are ready to be as flexible as possible

“We are ready to be as flexible as possible. We are ready to work with an English text which hasn’t been legally scrubbed yet to prepare our final vote in the plenary but of course this all requires time and every day now counts.

Advertisement

“We are ready to organise an additional extraordinary plenary session between Christmas and New Year if this would be necessary.”

Hopes

He added: “I would say that people in the Parliament would prefer to have this meeting before Christmas Eve, say on December 23...

Advertisement

“My impression is if there is an agreement there will probably be an additional plenary session between Christmas and New Year.”

Ireland
Brexit agreement is within reach, says Micheál Mar...
Read More

Mr McAllister said he “sincerely hopes” a deal is reached and that as long as both sides are talking there is “still the option to get a deal” – though he stressed that “many differences remain”.

“Of all options a no-deal Brexit would be the worst one – it would have severe consequences for the EU but especially for the UK," he said.

“It would have negative consequences for both sides but the impact on the UK economy would be larger.”

Advertisement

Read More

Message submitting... Thank you for waiting.

Want us to email you top stories each lunch time?

Download our Apps
© BreakingNews.ie 2024, developed by Square1 and powered by PublisherPlus.com