Just days ahead of Britain’s exit from the
European Union, both sides claim to be well prepared for the forthcoming
negotiations about their future relationship. Downing Street says Boris
Johnson would happily start the talks the day after Brexit Day, if only the
EU didn’t have to wait until February 24th to agree its negotiating mandate.
Whitehall sources recall that the EU
complained that Theresa May’s government was never clear about what it
wanted, adding that Johnson’s approach would present no such problems.
Britain wants a Canada-style free trade deal, they say, citing the
Conservative manifesto’s promise that the future arrangement should involve
no “political alignment”.
The EU is unsure, however, what London means
when it says it wants no alignment, and some in Brussels wonder if Downing
Street itself knows.
We will get an idea of the EU’s approach to
the negotiations in the days after Brexit Day, when the European Commission
publishes its “negotiation directives”. These will be the commission’s
proposals for the negotiating mandate that must be approved by the 27
member-state governments.
If Downing Street thinks the commission’s
proposals represent an outlandish opening bid that will be substantially
watered down by the member states, it is likely to be disappointed. Michel
Barnier, who is leading the EU’s negotiating team, has been consulting the 27
governments to ensure that the commission’s proposals contain no surprises
and the directives he publishes are likely to be close to the final
negotiating mandate.
Johnson will outline Britain’s approach in a
speech in early February, which could also sketch out what he hopes to
achieve in a trade deal with the US.
Despite warnings from Brussels about the tight
timetable for the negotiations, both sides agree that it is possible to agree
a deal by the end of this year, although the EU insists that such an
agreement will have to be very limited. This could involve a dramatic scaling
down of ambition a few months into the negotiations, prioritising progress in
those areas where a cliff-edge at the end of the Brexit transition period at
the end of December would be most damaging.
Britain and the EU have a mutual interest in
securing a free trade agreement covering goods and a security arrangement that
allows them to continue to share information on criminal suspects and to
extradite them with ease.
The EU believes it is making Britain a
generous offer of zero-tariff, zero-quota access for goods to its market of
450 million people. What it demands in return is a commitment from Britain to
maintain a “level playing field” on state aid, social and environmental
standards and taxation.
Speaking in Davos on Thursday, chancellor of
the exchequer SajidJavid said Britain was leaving the single market and the customs
union to gain control of its rules and laws.
“We will be a sovereign and independent
country, not a rule-taker. But we’ll always protect the interests of British
businesses throughout this process and we’ll maintain high standards – not
because we are told to, but because we want to,” he said.
Javid’s remarks reflect a view in Downing
Street that Britain can voluntarily maintain high standards but it cannot
agree to anything that would mean automatically adopting new rules set in
Brussels. This rules out “dynamic alignment” with EU rules but it does not
necessarily exclude a commitment to “non-regression” by maintaining at least
the same high standards when the transition period ends in December.
In May’s deal, which the EU regards as the
starting point for negotiations, Britain agreed to dynamic alignment on state
aid rules but only to non-regression on social and environmental standards.
On taxation, Britain agreed to remain aligned with a number of directives.
In reality, Britain spends much less on state
aid than other big European countries, so a major expansion in its support
for businesses would probably be possible even if it agreed to non-regression
with the EU. EU member states watched with alarm Johnson’s swift intervention
to rescue the airline Flybe and they will want any free trade agreement to
include a cast-iron commitment on limiting state aid.
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