Johnson the Brexit 'Hulk' finally meets EU's Juncker
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson met EU chief Jean-Claude Juncker for talks Monday insisting a Brexit deal is possible, despite deep skepticism from European capitals with just six weeks to go before departure day.
EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker (L) shakes hands with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson prior to their meeting on September 16, 2019 in Luxembourg. [Photo: AFP]
After a weekend in which he compared himself to comic book super-smasher Hulk, the British leader will enjoy a genteel working lunch of snails and salmon in Luxembourg with the EU Commission president.
Downing Street has confidently billed the Luxembourg visit as part of efforts to negotiate an orderly divorce from the union before an October 17 EU summit.
A UK spokesman said Johnson would tell Juncker that "progress has been made, given that before the summer recess many said reopening talks would not be possible.
"The UK needs to enact the referendum result and avoid another delay; the UK wants to deliver Brexit and move on to other priorities, and EU member states' leaders want to renegotiate an orderly Brexit."
But Brussels has played down talk of a breakthrough, insisting Johnson has yet to suggest any "legally operable" proposal to revise a previous withdrawal accord.
As he shook hands with Johnson, Juncker declared himself "cautiously optimistic" and insisted that "Europe never loses patience" despite the tortuous Brexit saga dragging on over three years.
Finland's European affairs minister, Tytti Tuppurainen, who was chairing an EU ministerial meeting in Brussels, gave a more downbeat assessment, repeating the bloc's long-standing complaint that London has simply not come up with detailed ideas for replacing the so-called "Irish backstop" section of the divorce deal.
"The European Union is always ready to negotiate when a proper proposal from the UK side is presented," Tuppurainen said.
"So far I haven't seen any proposal that would compensate the backstop."
The EU's chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier, who joined the leaders for their talks in Juncker's native Grand Duchy, said last week he has "no reason to be optimistic".
The European Parliament will this week vote on a resolution rejecting Johnson's demand that the backstop clause be stripped from the deal.
Johnson insists this measure, which temporarily keeps the UK in the EU customs union, has to go if he is to bring the agreement back to the House of Commons.
But the accord will also have to win the support of the other 27 EU leaders and the European Parliament if Britain is not to crash out with no deal on October 31 -- a scenario that businesses warn would bring economic chaos.
Johnson, in turn, boasts that he would rather be "dead in a ditch" than ask his European counterparts to postpone Brexit for a third time.
"Be in no doubt that if we cannot get a deal -- the right deal for both sides -- then the UK will come out anyway," Johnson said, writing in the Daily Telegraph on Monday.