Brexit: Businesses and unions call for urgency

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Image caption The joint statement asks for "jobs, rights and livelihoods" to be put first

Business and union leaders from across the UK and Europe have joined together to plead for "pace and urgency" in Brexit negotiations.

The CBI and the TUC along with their European counterparts are calling on the UK government and the European Union to make "measureable progress".

UK and EU leaders will attend a European Council meeting this week.

The groups say the UK and the EU must "put economic interests and people's jobs, rights and livelihoods first".

The CBI, BusinessEurope, the TUC and the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC) collectively represent 45 million workers and 20 million employers across the EU.

In a joint statement, they said: "We are calling on the UK government and the EU to inject pace and urgency in the negotiations, bringing about measurable progress, in particular a backstop arrangement to avoid a hard border in Ireland.

"Decisions will be needed in June and October to finalise the withdrawal agreement and the transitional arrangement, and put economic interests and people's jobs, rights and livelihoods first."

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Image caption CBI director-general Carolyn Fairbairn

UK Prime Minister Theresa May will attend the European Council meeting on 28-29 June. However, she will be excluded from a gathering of the other 27 EU nations where chief negotiator Michel Barnier will provide on update on Brexit talks.

Carolyn Fairbairn and Markus Beyrer, the director-generals of the CBI and BusinessEurope respectively, as well as Luca Visentini and Frances O'Grady, the general secretaries of the ETUC and the TUC, met earlier this month in London to discuss Brexit.

Ahead of the European Council meeting they said: "The UK government and the EU will need to agree on all aspects of regulatory alignment, which is of the utmost importance, without jeopardising the integrity of the single market."

A spokesman for the UK government said: "We absolutely agree. That's why we have put forward workable proposals to the EU on a range of areas from the backstop to security, and the White Paper - which will be published after June Council - will continue to drive this process forward.

"We are confident that we can make progress if both the EU and UK engage constructively."