Britain will not accept supervision from the European Union as part of a free trade deal after Brexit, its chief negotiator said on Monday.Senior diplomat David Frost told academics and diplomats in Brussels that London would not follow EU-imposed “level playing field” rules.



Instead, it will set its own standards for commerce and state aid even if that means giving up privileged access to the EU single market.“It isn’t a simple negotiating position which might move under pressure — it is the point of the whole project,” Frost said of Brexit.



His speech at the Free University of Brussels took place as EU member states were drawing up a mandate for their own negotiator, Michel Barnier.

Some capitals, in particular France, are pushing for a post-Brexit deal in which Britain would have to sign up to EU-supervised regulation.



Britain’s neighbors want continued access to British fishing waters and for London agree not to undercut EU workplace and environmental standards

But Frost, outlining the position championed by Prime Minister Boris Johnson, said London wanted a deal of the kind Brussels signed with Canada.



The CETA deal removes the vast bulk of tariffs on trade between the EU and Canada but does bind Canada to follow EU legislation.If that is not available, then at the end of the year and the post-Brexit transition period Britain and the EU will simply trade under WTO rules.



“We must have the ability to set laws that suit us — to claim the right that every other non-EU country in the world has,” Frost said.



“So to think that we might accept EU supervision on so-called level playing field issues simply fails to see the point of what we are doing.”



European trade experts also met on Monday and tweaked the negotiating mandate that Barnier hopes member state ambassadors will approve during the week.



In the latest version of the mandate seen by AFP, member states made clear that they wanted “sufficient guarantees for a level playing field.”

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