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EU leaders cold on Brexit extensions as no-deal scenario increasingly likely

Xinhua | Updated: 2019-04-04 09:31

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and European Union Chief Brexit Negotiator Michel Barnier speak during a plenary session of the European Parliament in Brussels, Belgium April 3, 2019. [Photo/Agencies]

BRUSSELS - European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker appeared to close the door on Wednesday before British Prime Minister Theresa May's request for a second short extension of Brexit, saying it would not be possible if the withdrawal agreement was not approved by the British House of Commons by April 12.

Shortly after May's appeal, Juncker gave the strongest evidence to date among growing indications that the European Union (EU) was bracing itself for a no-deal Brexit against the deadlock in British politics, despite how costly it would prove to both the bloc and Britain.

"I believe that a 'no deal' at midnight on the 12 April is now a very likely scenario," said Juncker as he addressed Members of European Parliament (MEPs) meeting in Brussels for a part plenary session on Wednesday.

"It is not the outcome I want. But it is an outcome for which I have made sure the European Union is ready," Juncker added.

Nearing the end of his term before the European elections in May, Juncker said that if Britain will be in a position to approve the Withdrawal Agreement with a sustainable majority by April 12, the EU should be prepared to accept an extension until May 22.

April 12 would be the "ultimate deadline," however, for the House of Commons to approve the withdrawal agreement, he said.

Absent that approval, "no further short extension will be possible," said Juncker, for whom to extend any further would risk compromising the bloc's elections, and destabilizing the EU.

Speaking Tuesday in Brussels, EU chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier also said a no-deal Brexit was likely. "I do not wish for no-deal, I did not work at any moment for a no-deal, even if we are prepared," he said.

During a Tuesday press conference on the occasion of an official visit to Paris by Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, French President Emmanuel Macron placed the responsibility for the no-deal scenario with British leaders, asking for the British government to say what it proposed, and "to say it now."

"If the United Kingdom is not capable, nearly three years after the referendum, to propose a solution the brings together a majority, it will itself have chosen, de facto, to leave without an agreement, and we can not avoid failure for them," the French president said and repeated in a tweet.

For his part, Varadkar also indicated that the EU needed to avoid a "rolling extension," and that any proposal for more time "must have a clear purpose and a clear plan."

Both leaders pledged solidarity, and insisted that the "good functioning" of the EU and the single market needed to be a priority.

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