European Council president Donald Tusk has left a meeting with "No deal" yet over a renegotiation of the UK's relationship with the Prime Minister David Cameron.
It had been planned that any proposed deal could be put to other EU leaders on Monday, ahead of a February summit.
An early deal would allow Mr Cameron to call a referendum on the UK's EU membership before the summer holidays.
Mr Cameron and Mr Tusk met over dinner at Downing Street on Sunday.
However, Mr Cameron later said on Twitter that it had been a "good meeting" and that Mr Tusk had agreed to another 24 hours of talks before publishing the draft UK renegotiation text.
According to an EU source, Mr Tusk's negotiating team stayed in Downing Street after the meeting.
After the 24-hour period has passed, the team will assess the situation and decide whether to table a draft agreement or not.
'Emergency brake'
The pair hope to finalise a package of measures for the EU leaders' summit on 18 and 19 February.
As part of his attempts to renegotiate the UK's membership of the EU, Mr Cameron had proposed denying in-work benefits to all EU migrants until they had been in the UK for four years.
He said stopping those migrants from claiming tax credits - income supplements paid to those in low-paid work - would reduce high levels of immigration to the UK.
Mr Cameron is now seeking assurances that an alternative proposed "emergency brake" on welfare payments to EU migrants could be triggered immediately after the referendum, in a bid to reassure critics it would be effective in slowing the influx of foreign workers.
EU officials have suggested the UK could use the brake for up to four years, but would have to prove public services were under excessive strain.
Under current plans, it could be imposed within three months of the UK applying, if other EU states agreed.
The prime minister's spokesman said Mr Cameron and Mr Tusk had had a "productive working dinner", adding that "progress has been made in the past 48 hours, but we are not there yet".
He also said the European Commission had tabled a text saying that the UK meets the criteria for triggering an emergency brake on the payment of in-work benefits to EU migrants, describing this development as a "significant breakthrough".
This means Mr Cameron could deliver on his commitment to restrict in-work benefits to migrants for four years, he added.
But the spokesman acknowledged that there were other areas where there was more work to do.
According to BBC political correspondent Carole Walker, Mr Cameron and Mr Tusk agreed it was worth taking more time to try to resolve these areas, which included "economic governance" and "tackling the abuse of free movement".
She added that the "draft text we were expecting on Monday won't be circulated until Tuesday at the earliest".
Analysis
By Chris Mason, BBC political correspondent
A deal isn't a deal until, well, it's a deal. And there isn't one yet.
Donald Tusk's remarks on leaving Downing Street appeared stark.
"No deal," he said, to waiting reporters.
But a concrete deal on Sunday was always unlikely: with the next EU summit still over a fortnight away, there's still plenty of time for negotiation.
This latest calling point in the discussions was fuelled, we were told, by smoked salmon, fillet of beef and pear and apple crumble.
Such sustenance didn't provide stamina for Messrs Cameron and Tusk to talk into the night: in less than two hours, Mr Tusk was gone.
But their teams continue to talk; a "crucial" 24 hours beckons, we are told.
There could, though, be rather a lot of "crucial 24 hours" between now and referendum day, whenever that turns out to be.
David Cameron's four main aims for renegotiation
Integration: Allowing Britain to opt out from the EU's founding ambition to forge an "ever closer union" so it will not be drawn into further political integration
Benefits: Restricting access to in-work and out-of-work benefits to EU migrants. Specifically, ministers want to stop those coming to the UK from claiming certain benefits and housing until they have been resident for four years
Sovereignty: Giving greater powers to national parliaments to block EU legislation. The UK supports a "red card" system allowing member states to scrap, as well as veto, unwanted directives
Eurozone v the rest: Securing an explicit recognition that the euro is not the only currency of the European Union, to ensure countries outside the eurozone are not disadvantaged. The UK also wants safeguards that it will not have to contribute to eurozone bailouts
Source : BBC
It had been planned that any proposed deal could be put to other EU leaders on Monday, ahead of a February summit.
An early deal would allow Mr Cameron to call a referendum on the UK's EU membership before the summer holidays.
Mr Cameron and Mr Tusk met over dinner at Downing Street on Sunday.
However, Mr Cameron later said on Twitter that it had been a "good meeting" and that Mr Tusk had agreed to another 24 hours of talks before publishing the draft UK renegotiation text.
According to an EU source, Mr Tusk's negotiating team stayed in Downing Street after the meeting.
After the 24-hour period has passed, the team will assess the situation and decide whether to table a draft agreement or not.
'Emergency brake'
The pair hope to finalise a package of measures for the EU leaders' summit on 18 and 19 February.
As part of his attempts to renegotiate the UK's membership of the EU, Mr Cameron had proposed denying in-work benefits to all EU migrants until they had been in the UK for four years.
He said stopping those migrants from claiming tax credits - income supplements paid to those in low-paid work - would reduce high levels of immigration to the UK.
Mr Cameron is now seeking assurances that an alternative proposed "emergency brake" on welfare payments to EU migrants could be triggered immediately after the referendum, in a bid to reassure critics it would be effective in slowing the influx of foreign workers.
EU officials have suggested the UK could use the brake for up to four years, but would have to prove public services were under excessive strain.
Under current plans, it could be imposed within three months of the UK applying, if other EU states agreed.
The prime minister's spokesman said Mr Cameron and Mr Tusk had had a "productive working dinner", adding that "progress has been made in the past 48 hours, but we are not there yet".
He also said the European Commission had tabled a text saying that the UK meets the criteria for triggering an emergency brake on the payment of in-work benefits to EU migrants, describing this development as a "significant breakthrough".
This means Mr Cameron could deliver on his commitment to restrict in-work benefits to migrants for four years, he added.
But the spokesman acknowledged that there were other areas where there was more work to do.
According to BBC political correspondent Carole Walker, Mr Cameron and Mr Tusk agreed it was worth taking more time to try to resolve these areas, which included "economic governance" and "tackling the abuse of free movement".
She added that the "draft text we were expecting on Monday won't be circulated until Tuesday at the earliest".
Analysis
By Chris Mason, BBC political correspondent
A deal isn't a deal until, well, it's a deal. And there isn't one yet.
Donald Tusk's remarks on leaving Downing Street appeared stark.
"No deal," he said, to waiting reporters.
But a concrete deal on Sunday was always unlikely: with the next EU summit still over a fortnight away, there's still plenty of time for negotiation.
This latest calling point in the discussions was fuelled, we were told, by smoked salmon, fillet of beef and pear and apple crumble.
Such sustenance didn't provide stamina for Messrs Cameron and Tusk to talk into the night: in less than two hours, Mr Tusk was gone.
But their teams continue to talk; a "crucial" 24 hours beckons, we are told.
There could, though, be rather a lot of "crucial 24 hours" between now and referendum day, whenever that turns out to be.
David Cameron's four main aims for renegotiation
Integration: Allowing Britain to opt out from the EU's founding ambition to forge an "ever closer union" so it will not be drawn into further political integration
Benefits: Restricting access to in-work and out-of-work benefits to EU migrants. Specifically, ministers want to stop those coming to the UK from claiming certain benefits and housing until they have been resident for four years
Sovereignty: Giving greater powers to national parliaments to block EU legislation. The UK supports a "red card" system allowing member states to scrap, as well as veto, unwanted directives
Eurozone v the rest: Securing an explicit recognition that the euro is not the only currency of the European Union, to ensure countries outside the eurozone are not disadvantaged. The UK also wants safeguards that it will not have to contribute to eurozone bailouts
Source : BBC
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