The European Union has nine days to save Brexit talks or Britain will walk away without a deal.
That's the message Prime Minister Boris Johnson is sending to Brussels today. He's setting an Oct. 11 deadline for an agreement and proposing the whole U.K. leaves the EU customs union in a few weeks. After a transition period, there would be temporary arrangements for goods crossing the Northern Irish border for about four years.
Johnson's ultimatum is a far cry from the approach predecessor Theresa May took to the talks. She was fond of saying "no deal is better than a bad deal," but few really believed she meant it. Johnson appears to be content with a messy divorce and is doing little to prevent one, in the hope a tough line will yield results.
May's method failed. It's not clear that Johnson's tactics will succeed.
While he will get a rapturous response from the Tory faithful in Manchester today where he is speaking at the annual party conference, the reception to his "final" offer in Dublin, Berlin and Paris is far more important. So far there are no signs that European leaders are buying it.
That may be because they don't believe he'd be able to crash out without a deal, even if he wants to. The U.K. parliament has passed a law designed to stop him and there's a general election — and potential change of government — on the horizon.
Even before his deadline expires, Johnson may need a plan B.
- Tim Ross
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