The Canadian government has introduced a bill to implement the newly inked post-Brexit trade agreement with the United Kingdom, Global Affairs Canada said in a statement
British PM and the EU's chief executive gave themselves until the end of the weekend to seal a new trade pact after failing to overcome persistent rifts over a "frank" and "lively" dinner of turbot
Talk of a chaotic British split from the European Union grew with just three weeks left to break a deadlock in trade deal negotiations
British and EU leaders will meet face-to-face to try to seal a post-Brexit trade deal after failing again to narrow their differences recently
Since Britain formally left the EU on Jan. 31, negotiators have missed several deadlines for a deal with the world's largest trading bloc before a status quo transition period ends on Dec. 31
The Commission has held off on updating Brexit contingency plans amid the final push for a deal.
There has to be a breakthrough this week in talks for a post-Brexit trade agreement, British and Irish ministers said, ahead of the December 31 expiry of Britain's transition period for leaving
Britain will attempt to reassure business leaders it appreciates need for clarity on rules outside of the EU by setting up a task force to discuss challenges 50 days before the transition period ends
Far from backing down, however, the government said it would retable the contentious clauses when the bill returns to the House of Commons
British PM Boris Johnson said a trade deal with the European Union was "there to be done", suggesting his view that the agreement's broad outline was already "pretty clear" was shared in Brussels
The statement came after a call between British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen
With talks between the UK and EU still deadlocked after the British prime minister nearly-but-didn't-quite stage a walkout Friday, that's the only way EU officials say they can secure trade deal
After an EU demand for concessions, Prime Minister Boris Johnson broke off talks and said it was time to prepare for a no-deal Brexit: the nightmare scenario for business
Earlier, Michael Gove, the minister overseeing Brexit, had said there was agreement on the need to intensify trade talks and work on legal texts, after the negotiations broke down last week
Johnson asks UK to prepare for the latter; UK-based Indian businessmen hope a compromise will be found
Johnson's remarks, which follow an EU demand that London make further concessions, may push Brexit towards disorder
The EU leaders meeting in a summit on the day British Prime Minister Boris Johnson had set as a potential cutoff point for the acrimonious negotiations
The business ministry argues that most of what businesses need to do is the same regardless of the outcome of the negotiations and has planned a series of sector specific webinars in October
Michel acknowledged time was running out on a potential agreement that could save hundreds of thousands of jobs on both sides of the English Channel.
EU deadline for govt to remove sections of Internal Market Bill expired on Wednesday