Theresa May and Emanuel Macron to hold talks in France

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Theresa May and Emmanuel MacronImage source, Reuters

Prime Minister Theresa May is to hold talks with French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday, Downing Street says.

Mrs May has been invited to Mr Macron's holiday retreat in the south of France.

It comes as the UK government steps up its engagement with counterparts in the EU over Brexit.

Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt told the Evening Standard, external France and Germany had to "send a strong signal" to the European Commission on the need for a "pragmatic and sensible outcome".

And he warned that the likelihood of no deal being reached were "increasing by the day".

The UK is due to leave the EU on 29 March 2019, but the two sides have yet to agree on how their future relationship will work.

Key differences between the UK and the EU remain, more than a year after negotiations started.

Media caption,

Hard Brexit. Soft Brexit. No Deal. What does Brexit mean?

Government ministers say they want to reach a deal with the EU covering issues like trade and border checks, but are also making contingency plans to prepare for leaving with no agreement in place.

Last week the EU's chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, rejected a key part of Mrs May's proposals, which would involve the UK collecting customs duties on its behalf.

More concerns have been raised in the UK about the consequences of a no-deal Brexit.

An assessment by Dover Council said a giant 13-mile "lorry park", proposed for the M20, could be in place for years as ports try to cope with the situation.

It said "there does not appear to be a Plan B" if it does not work, and it could lead to "17-mile traffic jams".

Kent County Council has also warned that any increased border and customs checks could lead to delays and long queues of port freight traffic.

'Real chance of no deal'

Mr Hunt, who is holding talks with his French and Austrian opposite numbers, warned of economic consequences for both the UK and the EU if a deal can't be found.

"The probability of no deal is increasing by the day until we see a change of approach from the European Commission who have this view that they just need to wait and Britain will blink.

"That is just a profound misunderstanding of us as a nation," he said.

"There is a real chance of no deal by accident."

Making amends?

Media caption,

Jeremy Hunt gaffe: 'My wife is Japanese'

Mr Hunt's talks in France came on the back of a visit to China where he made headlines for a different reason - getting his wife's nationality wrong.

On Monday, the foreign secretary mistakenly told his hosts his Chinese wife was Japanese before correcting himself and admitting he had made a "terrible mistake".

He has since tweeted his apologies to his "long-suffering" wife - and he used his trip to France to make amends, choosing her some flowers in Paris:

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