EU looks at
extending Brexit transition period beyond 2020
Move is
being considered by EU officials in face of Johnson not seeking extension
beyond 11 months
Daniel
Boffey in Brussels
Sat 14 Dec
2019 15.48 GMTLast modified on Sat 14 Dec 2019 16.52 GMT
EU leaders
would take the initiative and request an extension to the transition period,
keeping the UK under Brussels regulations beyond 2020, under a plan mooted for
getting around Boris Johnson’s stated refusal to seek a delay.
The move is
being considered by EU officials as a way out of the problem posed by the short
time available to negotiate a new relationship and the prime minister’s
insistence that he will not seek an extension beyond 11 months.
With a
majority of 80 secured by the prime minister, the UK is expected to leave the
EU on 31 January – in fewer than 50 days. At the end of the transition period
on 31 December 2020, the UK is set to exit the EU’s customs union and single
market and enter newly negotiated arrangements.
Ursula von
der Leyen, the European commission’s president, said that negotiating a future
relationship in such a short timeframe would be very challenging.
Speaking on
Friday, at the end of a leaders’ summit in Brussels, she said the negotiations
would instead have to prioritise key EU issues, such as the trade in goods and
fisheries, and leave others for after 2020. Such a “sequencing” could leave
arrangements for the UK’s financial services sector and the landing rights of
British air carriers, among other issues, out of an initial deal.
Such a
staged approach would be unwelcome in Downing Street and would, in itself, be
difficult to complete given the clashes expected on both the UK’s future
alignment with EU laws and the level of access to British waters given to
European fishing fleets.
The
withdrawal agreement stipulates that the transition can be extended by “one or
two years” but that this must be agreed before 1 July next year. It is
recognised in Brussels that Johnson will find it politically impossible to seek
an extension to the transition to allow all the issues to be agreed.
On breaking
his word by asking for a delay, Johnson would have to open negotiations on how
much extra the UK would pay into the EU budget. Free movement of people would
also continue.
Instead, it
is understood initial discussions have taken place in Brussels about the EU
asking the British government for an extension, given the complexity of the
talks. It is likely that the EU would also need to sweeten the offer of an
extension by minimising the costs that the UK would face.
Sources
suggested that such a move might offer Johnson a better chance of gaining
cabinet approval, and avoid a cliff-edge exit from the EU’s structures on 31
December 2020, including the imposition of tariffs.
The
development highlights the difficulties facing the negotiators as they prepare
for talks. The Dutch prime minister, Mark Rutte, said on Friday that he
believed the negotiations in the next year would be far tougher than those over
the withdrawal agreement.
Some EU
capitals were left frustrated by Von der Leyen’s comments about the need to
sequence the talks, believing it risked antagonising the UK.
Mujtaba
Rahman, a former European commission official and now managing director for
Europe at Eurasia Group, a political risk research and consulting firm, said:
“The EU side hasn’t fully agreed how best to handle phase two and the big
internal debate in Europe is about prioritisation. The commission wants to
prioritise talks – akin to how it favoured sequencing in phase one – and start
with the areas where there’s no fallback, such as the free-trade agreement,
level playing field and governance.
“But EU
capitals do not, as member states, worry about pre-judging Johnson’s
preferences and his ability to make difficult concessions if the things that UK
wants aren’t on table at the outset, such as services.”
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