Britain will honour its commitments to the European Union, Prime Minister Theresa May said on Friday, trying to reassure increasingly frustrated leaders in the bloc who want London to spell out how much it will pay on Brexit.
May will meet leaders on the sidelines of an EU summit in Gothenburg, Sweden, to try to break the deadlock over the divorce settlement. But a government source said she was not yet planning to detail which commitments Britain was ready to pay.
She also faces a growing row with neighbour and EU member Ireland after Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said Dublin was not ready to allow the talks to move onto a discussion of future trade next month, something London desperately wants so it can offer some certainty to nervy businesses.
Under pressure at home from lawmakers in her own party who are concerned she is preparing for Britain to walk away with no deal and from EU officials to increase her opening bid, May's main focus in Gothenburg will be a meeting with Donald Tusk, the summit chair who is overseeing the Brexit process.
"For the negotiations, those continue, and obviously we look forward to the December European council and continuing to look through the issues. I was clear in my speech in Florence that we will honour our commitments," she said, referring to a speech in Italy two months ago when she last sought to re-set the talks.
"I've set out a vision for that economic partnership. I look forward to the European Union responding positively to that so we can move forward together," she told reporters.
May has long said Britain will "honour its commitments" but EU officials are urging the prime minister to detail which ones, and, if not demanding a total sum, to at least give them an idea of the shape of her proposed settlement.
But May, weakened after losing her Conservative Party's majority at a June election she did not need to call, has little room for manoeuvre. Some of her team of ministers are pressing her to hold off from naming a figure, seeing it as one of the few levers Britain has to press for better trade deal.


