Boris Johnson and Ursula von der Leyen agreed on Saturday to work together to unlock an EU-UK trade deal, as negotiations moved into a new “intensified” phase.
Britain’s prime minister and the European Commission president decided that they should become personally engaged to unblock talks, notably on state aid, dispute resolution mechanisms and fisheries.
After a video meeting on Saturday, both sides “agreed on the importance of finding an agreement, if at all possible, as a strong basis for a strategic EU-UK relationship in future”.
Both sides want to finalise a deal within weeks and talks between the negotiating teams will resume in London next week; EU leaders will take stock of progress at a European Council meeting on October 15-16.
The personal involvement of Mr Johnson and Ms von der Leyen is seen as the start of the end game of talks, as the lead actors get involved to attempt to engineer a political breakthrough.
In a joint statement, they agreed that “progress had been made in recent weeks but that significant gaps remained, notably but not only in the areas of fisheries, the level playing field and governance”.
David Frost, UK chief negotiator, and Michel Barnier, his EU counterpart, were instructed to “work intensively to try to bridge those gaps”. But Mr Johnson and Ms von der Leyen also “agreed to speak on a regular basis”.
The vast majority of the prospective free trade agreement — which aims to deliver tariff and quota-free trade between the two sides — is now in place, including provisional agreements on goods, services, transport, energy, social security and other issues.
“In many areas of our talks, although differences remain, the outlines of an agreement are visible,” Lord Frost said on Friday.
British officials privately believe that the deal will not founder on issues of state aid — and how to resolve disputes about subsidies — or fisheries, when so much is at stake politically and economically on both sides.
The question is whether Mr Johnson and EU leaders, represented by Ms von der Leyen, can resolve differences that strike at the heart of the sovereignty arguments that fuelled Brexit.
The British prime minister is under pressure to offer more access to EU fishing fleets and reassure the EU that there are mechanisms in place to stop the UK engaging in a subsidy race.
The EU will also be expected to move on both issues although Mr Barnier has already significantly softened demands from Brussels over Britain’s state aid policy.
One British official acknowledged as much: “Whatever happens now, we will be able to claim victory on state aid because they have already moved.” That provides Mr Johnson with some cover when he considers making further concessions on the state aid regime and fishing rights.
Although both sides say that no deal remains a possible outcome, those involved in the 2016 Brexit campaign say the prime minister and fellow Brexiter ministers such as Michael Gove and Rishi Sunak are determined to get a deal.
Mr Gove, who is in charge of no-deal planning, is said by fellow Eurosceptics to “fear” the possibility of a fractious parting of ways and chaos at the border. “He knows the potential for error in the system,” said one Brexiter.