March 2017
The EU’s opening gambit was comprehensive and clear. Any earlier sadness of Donald Tusk dissipated to make way for an undivided focus on the EU’s “interests, those of its member states, its citizens and its businesses.” While still a draft, to be signed off by EU leaders when they meet at the end of April, the letter was in keeping with wider European reaction earlier in the week. It contained the odd surprise, such as the suggestion that when it comes to Gibraltar’s future, Spain will have a special say. The EU position on the sequencing of talks was more flexible than it has been – choosing an ambiguous phrase to describe when the talks could move on from the divorce to the future trade deal. They said the second phase could be started “as soon as sufficient progress has been made in the first phase towards reaching a satisfactory agreement” on divorce, which is far from the insistence on one and then the other. Away from the letter, retaliation continued on the UK’s overt use of security as a bargaining chip. EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini made clear that the EU can “continue perfectly well” without Britain’s involvement: "The UK contributes today only for 3% of our civilian capabilities in our EU operations and missions, and 5% to the military ones.” Other key points in the letter included: UK can’t enjoy same benefits as a full EU member… • This has been reiterated many times now – and indeed accepted by the UK – but it is worth stressing as this will be one of the overarching principles of the talks. The challenge will be to find a deal that allows both parties to continue to enjoy free trade to the fullest possible extent while adhering to each other’s red lines on sovereignty (including over immigration) and maintaining the integrity of the single market. …but neither can it fully escape all of the costs and obligations
• The EU will insist that the regulatory frameworks of the UK and EU cannot diverge too much post-Brexit in order for a new comprehensive trade deal to be viable – “It must ensure a level playing field in terms of competition and state aid, and must encompass safeguards against unfair competitive advantages through, inter alia, fiscal, social and environmental dumping.” • This will provoke opposition on both sides of the UK political spectrum – many on the right see Brexit as an opportunity to rip up burdensome regulations across a swathe of policy areas ranging from employment through to environmental law while on the left (and indeed to some extent among Theresa May’s supporters) there is an appetite to pursue more interventionist and protectionist policies in areas like public procurement.
Sequencing • The guidelines confirm that discussions over the future UK-EU relationship – including a post-Brexit FTA – could get underway “as soon as sufficient progress has been made in the first phase towards reaching a satisfactory agreement on the arrangements for an orderly withdrawal.” • Tusk subsequently suggested that these negotiations could begin in the autumn, some 6 months after the triggering of Article 50. • Needless to say there will be some very tough issues to navigate during this first round of talks, most notably concerning the UK’s outstanding obligations, and it remains to be seen what the EU’s benchmark for “sufficient progress” will be. That said, it is not the complete rejection of any overlap that many had been anticipating.
Lucy was the Deputy Director of Britain Stronger In Europe, the campaign to remain in the EU
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