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Brexit: Michelle O'Neill warns 'we need a deal' as Boris Johnson says agreement unlikely

 Deputy First Minister Michelle O'Neill said "we need a deal"
 Deputy First Minister Michelle O'Neill said "we need a deal"  Deputy First Minister Michelle O'Neill said "we need a deal"

Deputy First Minister Michelle O'Neill has said "there must be a deal" on Brexit after British prime minister Boris Johnson warned that an agreement between the EU and UK is unlikely to be reached.

Mr Johnson has warned it is "very, very likely" that a post-Brexit trade deal with the European Union will not be reached.

The prime minister said he was "hopeful" that progress could be made in talks but stressed that the two sides remained stuck on fisheries and the so-called level-playing field.

His comments came after European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said the negotiating teams' positions remained apart on "fundamental issues".

The two leaders have agreed to make a decision on the future of the negotiations by the end of the weekend.

Speaking this afternoon, Ms O'Neill said: "There's certainly very negative mood music, which doesn't bode well.

"We've had some breakthroughs this week in terms of the Protocol being clarified and the fact that the British government have pulled back their threat of breaching international law.

"But, however, what's going to happen on Sunday is yet to be seen and we need to have a deal, there must be a deal and clarity must be given to consumers and to the businesses."

Asked if a no-deal was looking more likely, First Minister Arlene Foster said: "I hope that is not the case, I really do hope that the negotiators on both sides are able to come to a deal for us here in Northern Ireland.

"It's very important indeed for the whole of the UK to get a deal. I know that some people think that they could deal with an Australian type of Brexit. But really, for us, it would be very good if we had a free trade agreement."

Asked about the significance of resolution to some of the uncertainties around the operation of the Northern Ireland Protocol, Mrs Foster said: "Obviously we voted against the Protocol, it's not something that we wanted to have there. But we've been working very hard to try and change some of the worst excesses of it and to try to mitigate against some of the issues that have been there.

"We've seen some progress there. But, of course, it's a work in progress and there's still a lot of clarity that needs to come off the back of the Protocol. Of course, if there's a free trade agreement that helps with all of that."

Speaking to reporters on a visit to Blyth in Northumberland, Mr Johnson said: "Unfortunately at the moment, as you know, there are two key things where we just can't seem to make progress.

"And that's this kind of ratchet clause they've got in to keep the UK locked in to whatever they want to do in terms of legislation, which obviously doesn't work.

"And then there is the whole issue of fish where we've got to be able to take back control of our waters. So there is a way to go - we're hopeful that progress can be made.

"But I've got to tell that from where I stand now, here in Blyth, it is looking very, very likely that we will have to go for a solution that I think would be wonderful for the UK, and we'd be able to do exactly what we want from January.

"It obviously would be different from what we'd set out to achieve but I have no doubt this country can get ready and, as I say, come out on World Trade terms."

Earlier Mrs von der Leyen said the UK would be free to decide whether to follow suit each time the EU changes its regulations - though if it refused the bloc would adapt the conditions for access to its markets.

The level-playing field measures aimed at preventing the UK undercutting the EU on standards and state subsidies have proved a major stumbling block in the talks throughout.

On fisheries, the Commission president said the UK and EU have "not yet found the solutions to bridge our differences" and urged the Government to "understand the legitimate expectations of EU fishing fleets built on decades, and sometimes centuries, of access".

"On these and other points, our negotiators are working. We will decide on Sunday whether we have the conditions for an agreement or not."

She added: "One way or the other, in less than three weeks it will be new beginnings for old friends."

French president Emmanuel Macron meanwhile insisted he was not demanding to "have my cake and eat it" in response to a question on the EU's proposals that the bloc's fishermen would be able to continue to access UK waters for a year in a no-deal.

Chief negotiators Michel Barnier and Lord Frost are continuing talks in Brussels after Mr Johnson and Mrs von der Leyen agreed at a dinner on Wednesday to resume negotiations ahead of a decision on the future of talks this weekend.

Downing Street declined to deny reports that Mr Johnson had requested calls with the leaders of France and Germany but was rejected, after he said he would be willing to return to Brussels - or head to Paris or Berlin - to get a deal over the line.

The British prime minister also said yesterday that the Cabinet should "get on and make those preparations" for a departure on terms like Australia's, which does not have a trade deal with Europe, unlike Canada.

But Malcolm Turnbull, who was Australia's prime minister until 2018, said Mr Johnson should be "careful what you wish for" as Australia's relationship with the EU is "not one from a trade point of view that I think Britain would want, frankly".

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden defended the British government's description of a no-deal exit as trading on Australian-style terms, insisting ministers were not "taking people for a ride".

He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "I don't think it is taking people for a ride to take a major economy that is relatively similar to the United Kingdom and compare the trading relationship.

"I don't dispute that there will be challenges in relation to having an Australia-style relationship - by the way, it's worth saying those challenges apply to both sides, that's why it is so much in the interests of both sides to reach that deal, we are 90% of the way there.

"But we can't, as Labour appear to be suggesting... accept it at any price."

The British Retail Consortium has warned that supermarkets and their shoppers would be hit with a £3.1 billion annual "tariff bombshell" without a deal, with 85% of foods imported from the EU expected to face tariffs exceeding 5%.

However, Mr Dowden said most price rises would be 2%, and warned that EU countries would also be affected by a no-deal.

The pound continued to fall on Friday as traders' fears of a no-deal Brexit intensified.

Against the dollar it hit a three-week low of 1.323 on Friday, down 0.5%. Against the euro it fell to an 11-week low at 1.091, down 0.4%.

Typically the FTSE 100 would rise on a weak pound but it too was down 0.5% within an hour of opening.

Ayush Ansal, chief investment officer at the hedge fund Crimson Black Capital, said: "With a no-deal departure from the EU now arguably odds-on, the UK is heading for the worst possible outcome at the worst possible time."

He added: "Some market watchers are even suggesting the pound could fall to parity with the dollar in the event of no-deal, which would be a symbolic coup de grace for sterling."