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Monday, October 1, 2018

Six months before Brexit, the UK government is attacking the EU

The U.K. government is demanding action from the European Union (EU) amid strong frustration over the lack of proposals from Brussels on a post-Brexit relationship.

The U.K. is set to leave the EU in March 2019 and negotiators are working against the clock, trying to hammer a deal that will allow businesses to continue trading under relatively low tariffs. However, key differences, including the future of the Irish border with Northern Ireland, remain – leading many to believe that a no-deal is the more likely outcome.

Speaking to CNBC over the weekend, several members of the U.K. government appeared frustrated about the lack of help coming from the European Union.

"At the moment, it is very much a question of the European Union responding with its proposals. At the moment, there is nothing on the table," Chris Grayling, transport secretary told CNBC's Steve Sedgwick at the Conservative Party conference currently taking place in Birmingham.

Liam Fox, Trade secretary and an outspoken Brexit supporter, told CNBC on Sunday that it is the EU's "duty" to help the U.K. and put forward their proposals.

"They said they were not very happy with what the U.K. offered, in which case let them bring forward their own proposals," he said.

"Under Article 50 (the legislation that allows a EU country to leave the Union), we have the right to leave the European Union and they have a duty to help us in that future relationship. Let's see them now deliver what they promised to do in that treaty," Fox said.

The U.K. government presented in July a plan for its future relationship with the rest of the European Union. But the latter argued that some of the proposals compromised key principles under European law.

European Council President Donald Tusk said in September that the so-called Chequers plan would not work. U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May has stood by her proposal despite such messages from the EU. She told the BBC on Sunday that her Brexit plan is not dead.

However, May also faces criticism over her plan inside her own party. Boris Johnson, the former foreign affairs minister, who is seen as a potential candidate to replace the prime minister as Conservative leader, said the Chequers plan is "deranged."

David Lidington, cabinet secretary, told CNBC on Sunday that those who criticize the prime minister need to come up with "credible" alternative proposals.

"The key thing is to get the deal with the European Union because that's what will protect jobs and the economic interests of people in this country and the integrity of the United Kingdom, Great Britain and Northern Ireland, then we go to parliament and we make the case," he said.

"I think that our parliamentary colleagues at that point will have to face up to the fact there is a real decision about this country's future to be taken, we have not yet had any credible alternative from those that are criticizing the Prime Ministers' plan," Lidington added.

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