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May Cuts Short Holiday for Brexit Talks With Macron

U.K., European Union want to finalize the exit agreement at a summit of EU leaders in October.

May Cuts Short Holiday for Brexit Talks With Macron
Theresa May, U.K. prime minister, right, and Emmanuel Macron, France’s president, watch military planes fly overhead during a U.K.-France summit meeting (Photographer: Andy Rain/Bloomberg via Pool) 

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U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May will fly to meet French President Emmanuel Macron at his holiday retreat to discuss Brexit on Friday, her office said.

May is vacationing in Italy with her husband, Philip, but will leave a day earlier than planned to travel to the south of France for discussions on the U.K.’s withdrawal from the European Union. The date suited both leaders, who’ve been trying to find time to meet, according to a person familiar with the matter.

May Cuts Short Holiday for Brexit Talks With Macron

The prime minister and her senior officials are engaged in an intense bout of shuttle diplomacy as they attempt to persuade other European Union governments to support her blueprint for Brexit. British and European negotiators are running out of time to agree to the terms of the divorce and May’s team have begun talking up the risks of a failure to strike an accord.

Last week, the EU rejected a key part of May’s plan for a trade deal with the bloc. Both sides want to finalize the exit agreement at a summit of EU leaders in October.

May Cuts Short Holiday for Brexit Talks With Macron

May is planning two vacations during the long parliamentary recess, first to Italy and then to Switzerland. After visiting Macron, she will be back at work in London as normal on Monday, her office said. Brexit negotiations in Brussels are due to resume in the week of Aug. 13.

News of May’s plan to meet with the French president came as her ministers stepped up their diplomatic efforts to win backing for her Brexit proposals.

U.K. Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt visited his French counterpart in Paris on Tuesday, where he warned that an accidental failure to reach a deal in the negotiations would be a “tragedy” for Europe.

The impact of added restrictions on London’s financial center would be “far from trivial” for EU businesses, Hunt told the Evening Standard newspaper. “France and Germany have to send a strong signal to the Commission that we need to negotiate a pragmatic and sensible outcome,” he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Tim Ross in London at tross54@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Flavia Krause-Jackson at fjackson@bloomberg.net, Stuart Biggs, Emma Ross-Thomas

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