Prime Minister Joseph Muscat on Monday discussed the Brexit process with UK Prime Minister Theresa May in London.

The meeting focussed on a UK request for another delay in Britain's departure date from the EU, to June 30.

A decision will be taken when EU heads of government meet on Wednesday.

Theresa May on Monday started a last-minute flurry of European diplomacy that includes visits to Paris and Berlin. 

She had phone calls on Monday with EU Council president Donald Tusk and European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker.

May is due to visit German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday.

Faced with political deadlock in London, the EU agreed last month to postpone Brexit from March 29 to April 12, and May will formally ask at a special summit on Wednesday for it to be pushed back again to June 30.

All other 27 EU leaders must agree and most seem ready to accept the idea of another delay to avoid a harmful "no deal" Brexit, but likely for a much longer period than Britain has asked for.

UK sets date for European Parliament elections

In anticipation of this, May's government on Monday reluctantly laid the legal order needed to hold European Parliament elections on May 23.

But May is hoping that EU leaders might agree to a flexible delay proposed by Tusk, whereby Britain could leave earlier if it agrees a divorce deal, and never hold the elections.

"It does not make these elections inevitable as leaving the EU before the date of election automatically removes our obligation to take part," a spokeswoman said.

European leaders have also asked May to come up with a reason for a delay, with France in particular warning that it does not want simply to prolong the uncertainty.

After MPs rejected her divorce deal for a third time, May last week approached main opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn to try to find a compromise.

But Corbyn said Monday that he was still waiting for her to alter her approach.

"Talks have to mean a movement and so far there has been no change in those red lines," he said, adding that his team would speak to her ministers on Tuesday.

- Sincere cooperation -
May says she is determined to implement the 2016 referendum vote for Brexit, but that Britain should only sever ties with its largest trading partner once it has new arrangements in place.

Her decision to meet with Corbyn has sparked fury in her own Conservative party, with former foreign minister and leading Brexit supporter Boris Johnson warning against any "surrender".

Labour wants a new customs union with the EU, something May has previously rejected as it would stop Britain striking its own global trade deals.

But in a video-message on Sunday, she said: "The longer this takes, the greater the risk of the UK never leaving at all."

In Dublin, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar expressed optimism about the cross-party process as he met with the EU's chief Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier.

"We're open to extending the deadline to allow these discussions to run their course," he said.

But Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, who also spoke to May on Monday, said it was "crucial to know when and on what basis the UK will ratify the withdrawal agreement".

He tweeted that any Brexit delay would require "assurances from the UK on sincere cooperation".

May used that phrase in her letter to Tusk, saying Britain would continue to act as a "constructive and responsible" member state while it remained part of the bloc.

- Political changes -
Labour is pressing for changes to a political declaration on Britain's future relationship with the EU, which accompanies the withdrawal deal.

Barnier repeated that this could be reworked "extremely quickly".

Corbyn said May's government had been open to the idea, "but they haven't said in which way".

He added: "We are looking for movement. We do not want to see a crashing out of the EU with no deal."

The EU has by contrast refused to renegotiate the withdrawal agreement itself, which includes controversial plans to keep open the Irish border.

Barnier repeated his warning to hardline Brexiteers that, in the case of a no-deal Brexit, the EU would not start trade talks until the Irish issue was resolved.

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