BUCHAREST/LONDON (Reuters) - The British government is optimistic about reaching some form of deal with the opposition Labour Party to end a deadlock on Brexit as work on a compromise continues, Britain’s finance minister Philip Hammond said on Saturday.

But Labour said the governing Conservatives needed to be more flexible and had not shown any movement on a political declaration of intent on the future relationship between London and Brussels once Britain has left the European Union.

No talks have been arranged yet between the two sides for this weekend, a Labour source told Reuters.

Prime Minister Theresa May has asked EU leaders to postpone Britain’s exit from the bloc next Friday until June 30 but the EU insists she must first show a viable plan to secure agreement on her thrice-rejected divorce deal in the British parliament.

It is the latest twist in a saga which leaves Britain, the world’s fifth-biggest economy, struggling to find a way to honor a 2016 referendum vote to take the country out of the globe’s largest trading bloc.

Hammond, however, told reporters on Saturday he was upbeat about breaking the impasse.

“I am optimistic that we will reach some form of agreement with Labour,” he said on the sidelines of a meeting of European Union finance ministers in Bucharest, adding he expected the exchange of “some more texts today.”

The government had no red lines in the talks, he said.

But Labour’s home affairs spokeswoman said the Conservatives needed to show a willingness to compromise on Prime Minister Theresa May’s red lines, which include no more membership of the EU’s customs union or single market.

“My understanding is that there has been no movement from the government on the actual concept of the political declaration and that is key,” Diane Abbott told BBC radio on Saturday. “The government perhaps has to show a little more flexibility than it seems to have done so far.”

Hammond, who is one of the most pro-European members of May’s government, also signaled optimism about next Wednesday’s EU summit on Brexit, saying most EU states agreed there was a need to delay Brexit. “Most of the colleagues that I am talking to accept we will need longer to complete this process.”

Britons voted in 2016 by a 52 to 48 percent margin for Brexit and the two main parties, parliament and the nation at large remain profoundly split over the terms for departure as well as over whether to leave at all.

Many within the Conservative Party are increasingly worried that any delay obliging Britain to again take part in elections for the European parliament on May 23-26 would be deeply divisive.

“Going to the EU elections for the Conservative Party, or indeed for the Labour Party, and telling our constituents why we haven’t been able to deliver Brexit I think would be an existential threat,” junior education minister Nadhim Zahawi told BBC radio on Saturday.

“I would go further and say...it would be the suicide note of the Conservative Party.”