Brexit: No deal would be 'enormous failure', says Coveney
- Published
A no deal Brexit would be an "enormous failure of politics and diplomacy", says Ireland's foreign minister.
Speaking to Nick Robinson on BBC Radio 4's Political Thinking, Simon Coveney said he wants to find a deal that avoids "disruption and division".
Trade negotiations between the UK and the EU will continue next week.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said both sides should "move on" if a deal cannot be made by the next European Council summit on 15 October.
The Brexit transition period, during which the UK has continued to trade freely with the EU, is due to end on 31 December.
Mr Coveney told Nick Robinson it was "surely it is in Britain's interests" to have a "friendly" relationship with the EU, "as opposed to something that continues to drift away from the EU in isolation in the middle of the Atlantic".
"That is not a future for Britain that I want as someone who cares about Britain," he added.
One of the biggest challenges in the trade talks has been the status of goods going between Britain and Northern Ireland, which has a land border with the rest of the EU.
Mr Coveney urged British negotiators to "listen to genuine Irish concerns and try to accommodate them," saying: "Britain, I hope, is a big enough country to be able to understand listen to the genuine concerns of its closest neighbour."
"This can be done," he said of a deal. "This can be settled and we can get a deal that everybody can live with."
"It will be an enormous failure of politics and diplomacy if that doesn't happen by the end of the year."
Nick Robinson's full interview with Simon Coveney is available on the Political Thinking podcast on BBC Sounds or you can listen to it on BBC Radio 4 at 17:30 on Saturday 26 September.
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