Advertisement

France to 'accelerate preparations for no-deal Brexit'

AFP
AFP - [email protected]
France to 'accelerate preparations for no-deal Brexit'
annieeagle/Depositphotos"

France is speeding up preparations for a "no deal" Brexit after the British parliament overwhelmingly rejected the agreement on the table, a French presidential source said Wednesday.

Advertisement

"The scenario we don't want is a no deal and the risks multiplied yesterday," the source said.
   
"The prime minister will meet tomorrow with the key ministers concerned to take stock of the preparations and accelerate them," the source added.
   
Ministers had already scheduled a meeting to decide on France's response to the result of the British parliamentary vote.
 
France has like other European nations been preparing for a scenario in which Britain crashes out of the EU with no divorce deal, and has already been recruiting extra customs agents to be deployed in Channel ports.
 
READ ALSO:

How to prepare for no-deal Brexit in France: Taxes, health and your carte de séjour

French employers' group MEDEF meanwhile called on the country's businesses to prepare for "the worst".
   
"Yesterday's vote piled uncertainty upon uncertainty," its chief Geoffroy Roux de Bezieux said.
   
Some 30,000 French companies export to Britain, according to the French finance ministry, with goods worth some 31 billion euros ($35.4 billion) in 2017.
 
The federation of French wine and spirits exporters (FEVS) expressed alarm over the situation. 
   
Britain is the second-biggest export market for French wines, after the United States, and France is a major importer of British spirits.
   
"This vote is prejudicial to the historical and fruitful trading relationship between our two countries," FEVS president Antoine Leccia said, calling on British and EU leaders to "do everything possible to find an alternative political solution by March 29".
   
French lawmakers have since November been debating a bill dealing with the Brexit fallout, which would potentially empower the government to issue emergency decrees if needed.
   
France's Europe Minister Nathalie Loiseau said Wednesday that "If the British want to stay [in the EU ], they are very welcome."
 
Loiseau added that the EU could extend the deadline for Brexit beyond March 29 if Britain made such a request but she stressed that other EU nations considered the deal already on the table to be "the only one possible". 
   
President Emmanuel Macron late Tuesday indicated there was a small chance of only very minor tweaks being made to the agreement.
 
"Maybe we'll make improvements on one or two things, but I don't really think so because we've reached the maximum of what we could do with the deal," he said.

More

Join the conversation in our comments section below. Share your own views and experience and if you have a question or suggestion for our journalists then email us at [email protected].
Please keep comments civil, constructive and on topic – and make sure to read our terms of use before getting involved.

Please log in to leave a comment.

See Also