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Brexit: Donald Tusk warns UK against 'no deal threat' Brexit: Donald Tusk warns UK against 'no deal threat'
(35 minutes later)
The EU will "not be intimidated" by threats about the UK leaving with no deal, Donald Tusk has said.The EU will "not be intimidated" by threats about the UK leaving with no deal, Donald Tusk has said.
He said suggestions the UK would be better off leaving with no deal, rather than with a bad deal, "increasingly take the form of a threat".He said suggestions the UK would be better off leaving with no deal, rather than with a bad deal, "increasingly take the form of a threat".
The European Council president told the European Parliament that in the Brexit talks "a no deal scenario would be bad for everyone but above all for the UK".The European Council president told the European Parliament that in the Brexit talks "a no deal scenario would be bad for everyone but above all for the UK".
He said the "goal is a smooth divorce" with the UK and EU as "good friends". He said the "goal is a smooth divorce" with the UK and EU as "good friends"
Mr Tusk made the remarks at the last meeting of the European Parliament before the UK triggers Article 50, which kick-starts Britain's withdrawal from the EU and is expected to happen later this month. He told the last meeting of the European Parliament before the UK triggers Article 50 that it was "carefully preparing" for Brexit and "it is our wish to make this process constructive and conducted in an orderly manner".
Orderly manner
They also come after the EU withdrawal bill was backed by the House of Lords, clearing the way for it to receive Royal Assent and become law.
He said the EU was "carefully preparing" for Brexit and "it is our wish to make this process constructive and conducted in an orderly manner".
But he warned: "However, the claims, increasingly taking the form of threats that no agreement will be good for the UK, and bad for the EU, need to be addressed.But he warned: "However, the claims, increasingly taking the form of threats that no agreement will be good for the UK, and bad for the EU, need to be addressed.
"I want to be clear that a 'no deal scenario' would be bad for everyone, but above all for the UK, because it would leave a number of issues unresolved."I want to be clear that a 'no deal scenario' would be bad for everyone, but above all for the UK, because it would leave a number of issues unresolved.
"We will not be intimidated by threats - and I can assure you they simply will not work."We will not be intimidated by threats - and I can assure you they simply will not work.
"Our goal is to have a smooth divorce and a good framework for the future - and it is good to know that Prime Minister Theresa May shares this view.""Our goal is to have a smooth divorce and a good framework for the future - and it is good to know that Prime Minister Theresa May shares this view."
No deal 'not frightening'
Mr Tusk also stressed that he would "do everything in my power to make sure that the EU and the UK will be close friends in the future", adding that "Britain will be dearly missed as an EU member state".Mr Tusk also stressed that he would "do everything in my power to make sure that the EU and the UK will be close friends in the future", adding that "Britain will be dearly missed as an EU member state".
"At the same time, I would like to stress again that the EU's door will always remain open for our British friends," he said."At the same time, I would like to stress again that the EU's door will always remain open for our British friends," he said.
In Westminster meanwhile, Brexit Secretary David Davis told the Commons Exiting the European Union committee, he expected the European Union (Notification of Withdrawal) Bill, which cleared the Commons and the Lords earlier this week, to receive Royal Assent and become law on Thursday.
The new law will give Theresa May the power to invoke Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty and trigger formal Brexit negotiations - a move she is expected to make by the end of March.
Asked about Mr Tusk's comments, Mr Davis told MPs it was right to assume leaving the EU without a deal would involve trade tariffs.
Asked whether this would be a good thing, he said: "At this stage, until we have worked out all the mitigation procedures, we could not quantify the outcome."
He said this would not be as good as the free trade deal the government was seeking with the EU, but was "not as frightening" as some people think.
Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon says she wants to ask the UK government for permission to hold a second referendum on Scottish independence to protect the nation's interests in the wake of the UK opting to leave the EU.
She said the Brexit vote has left Scotland at a crossroads, with an independence referendum needed to allow the country to choose which path to take.