LONDON, April 23 -- Politicians returned to Westminster Tuesday after their Easter recess with no progress reported during the latest round of talks between the two main parties seeking to end the Brexit deadlock.
The governing Conservatives and their rivals, the Labour Party, blamed each other for the lack of progress in the quest to find a deal both sides can agree to enable Britain to leave the European Union.
Prime Minister Theresa May, eager for her own three-times rejected Brexit withdrawal deal to win support, accused Labour of "dragging its feet in Brexit compromise talks", the Daily Telegraph in London reported.
May is said to have told her senior ministers at a Tuesday cabinet meeting that while talks with Labour were serious, they had hit difficulties over how quickly they should take place and reach a conclusion.
Main opposition leader, Labour's Jeremy Corbyn accused the government of just "regurgitating" the prime minister's plan over and over again, accusing the government of dragging its feet.
Corbyn said the government had so far refused to move on the terms of May's Brexit deal which MPs have already rejected three times, once by the biggest margin in British political history.
The Telegraph commented: "The comments by the two leaders suggest a Brexit breakthrough remains incredibly unlikely and the two sides may well be pivoting towards a blame game ahead of the potential collapse of the talks."
【国际英语资讯:Blame game continues as search for Brexit solution goes on in London】相关文章:
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