5 things to watch for in the latest Northern
Ireland Brexit bust-up
Boris Johnson’s government is set to present a bill
Monday allowing it to waive controversial post-Brexit rules on trade.
BY CRISTINA
GALLARDO
June 12,
2022 4:12 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/brexit-northern-ireland-trade-europe-5-things-to-watch/
LONDON — A
battered and bruised Boris Johnson is trying to shake up Brexit talks — again.
Just a week
after he saw off a Conservative party revolt against his leadership, the U.K.
prime minister’s government will on Monday present a bill in the House of
Commons allowing it to waive controversial post-Brexit rules on trade from
Great Britain to Northern Ireland, known as the Northern Ireland protocol.
The bill is
expected to be published around lunchtime, and Foreign Secretary Liz Truss will
address MPs in the Commons mid-afternoon.
EU
diplomats have warned the bill will unleash an angry response and legal action
in the comings days, and you can expect howls of opposition from Brexit
opponents in Westminster — but the row won’t end there.
Here are five
more big things to watch for in the coming days as the controversy unfolds.
Will London
go further than its previous plan?
Britain and
the EU have been in (fairly unproductive) talks on the protocol — a key part of
the Brexit divorce deal — for months, and the U.K. is hoping for a game-changer
with its new bill.
After Truss
took over the Brexit brief from David Frost last year, Brexit-watchers have
been trying to determine whether she’ll adopt a tougher line on the arrangement
than her predecessor, who penned a paper in July 2021 outlining the U.K.’s
ideas.
The
protocol was agreed by the U.K. and EU after painstaking negotiations in 2019
and introduces customs and sanitary controls on British goods arriving at
Northern Ireland’s ports. But London argues that the setup is undermining
hard-won political power sharing in Northern Ireland and imposing overly
burdensome barriers to trade.
Brussels
meanwhile contends that the arrangement is needed to avoid a land border
between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland — flagged as a potential
threat to peace on the island of Ireland — while still protecting the bloc’s
single market. The European Commission pitched changes of its own in a bid to
break the deadlock, but the U.K. does not believe they go far enough.
Monday’s
law will certainly mark a ratcheting up of London’s tactics, even if the policy
ideas are pretty familiar to those acquainted with the 2021 plan.
If passed,
the law will effectively allow U.K. ministers to unilaterally stop applying
part of the protocol they don’t like, without running that past Brussels.
Truss has
once again floated the creation of a frictionless “green lane” for trusted
British traders moving goods into Northern Ireland that aren’t intended for the
EU single market, coupled with a “red lane” for full checks and customs
controls for goods destined for the EU. The U.K. foreign secretary has promised
that businesses in Northern Ireland will be able to choose between meeting
British or EU standards under a new dual regulatory regime.
Brexit-watchers have been trying to determine whether
Liz Truss will adopt a tougher line on the Northern Ireland protocol than her
predecessor |
One new
flashpoint will be whether the bill includes an automatic sunset clause to
scrap EU rules in Northern Ireland after a set number of years — a demand
reportedly made by Conservative Brexiteers in the European Research Group (ERG)
during meetings with Truss. Northern Ireland’s Secretary Brandon Lewis kept
quiet on the Sunday political media round, refusing to clarify whether such a
clause had made it into the bill despite opposition from Cabinet ministers.
Watch also
for any remarks on whether the government will trigger Article 16 of the
protocol, the clause intended to allow either side to unilaterally override
some aspects of it.
Before
dramatically resigning last year, Frost tried to persuade Johnson to trigger
it. That didn’t happen, but the U.K. could still invoke it as the bill passes
through parliament in order to introduce changes to customs paperwork and
controls before the whole thing actually becomes law.
How hard
will the UK go on the EU’s top court?
There are
concerns the draft legislation may now be more hardline than the 2021 plan when
it comes to the role of the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU) as the final
arbiter of disputes in Northern Ireland.
The devil
will be in the details as to whether Britain vows to ignore the CJEU altogether
or tries to give it a more discreet or limited role, perhaps through the
creation of an arbitration panel like the one drawn up for disputes with the EU
under the post-Brexit Trade and Cooperation Agreement.
Lewis rolled
the pitch for such a plan Sunday, telling Times Radio that “a more traditional
independent arbitration process” would be “a much more logical way” to solve
disputes over trade rules in Northern Ireland. Yet the CJEU’s role remains the
Commission’s biggest red line.
Domestic
political wrangling looks to have played a part in the U.K.’s shift here. The
Sunday Times reported this weekend that Johnson sided with senior Cabinet
ministers Michael Gove and Rishi Sunak — who opposed Truss’ more hardline version
— at a crunch meeting on the proposals. But the prime minister is reported to
have shifted position the next day to accept tweaks proposed by the ERG. A
source present at the meeting told the Sunday Times to expect “a very hardline
position” on the role of the CJEU.
Removing
the CJEU altogether remains “a very important issue” for the ERG — and could be
the factor that determines how votes on the legislation in the House of Commons
pan out, the group’s deputy chairman David Jones said.
How will
Northern Ireland's unionists and Westminster's Brexiteers react?
Johnson’s
government has consulted Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) on
the broad outline of its plan. But Northern Ireland’s biggest unionist force —
which bitterly opposes the protocol on the grounds it drives a wedge between
Northern Ireland and Great Britain — remains suspicious.
The DUP is
refusing to join the region’s power-sharing government unless the protocol is
ditched, and it's keeping its counsel ahead as the legislative journey for the
bill gets started.
“I think it
would probably be very foolish for us to give a view on something that could be
changed through its passage through the House of Commons or the House of
Lords,” DUP MP Sammy Wilson said.
In recent
days, the DUP’s anger has been targeted at Dublin rather than London — with
party leader Jeffrey Donaldson accusing the Irish government of being “tone
deaf” to unionist concerns over the protocol.
That focus
could shift fast if the U.K. government is seen to have underdelivered. Lewis
admitted Sunday that the DUP has given no assurance to the U.K. government that
it will rejoin power-sharing in Northern Ireland after the bill is published.
Meanwhile,
Brexiteers in Westminster have warned they will vote down the bill in the
Commons if it does not neutralize the Northern Ireland protocol. Tory lawmaker
and ERG member Bernard Jenkin told the Commons he’s ready to vote against the
proposals if that goal is not fulfilled.
Doing the
maths on all this is somewhat tricky, as the group refuses to reveal how many
members it has. Jones said the ERG has “just enough” MPs to block the bill if
it’s not to Brexiteers’ liking.
As the past
week in U.K. politics has just shown, Johnson doesn’t exactly have the tightest
grip on party discipline — so there could be trouble ahead.
How will
Washington respond?
On the
other side of the Tory spectrum, Remainers and other Conservatives harboring
concerns about the bill are mulling whether it’s better to try and amend it or
to vote it down. A core group can be expected to oppose the law loudly from the
start, but a few others will wait to see how Washington reacts.
Many U.S.
Democrats take a keen interest in peace in Northern Ireland, and President Joe
Biden and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi have previously warned that they
will not welcome any attempts to undermine the Good Friday/Belfast agreement.
The U.K.
government argues its plan actually protects that setup, but Pelosi issued a
punchy statement warning London to forget about a post-Brexit trade deal with
Washington if it forges ahead. That’s focusing minds in Westminster.
“If the
U.S. is very damning then that would strengthen mood,” one Conservative MP
said. This is “because U.S. support for a trade deal is fundamental to
demonstrating success of Brexit,” they added. “If the government cannot secure
that, then there will be heavy criticism. A fight with the EU is priced in. But
be aware that this is an issue on which the PM could also rally pro-Brexit
support, and the U.S. ‘interference’ would cut both ways.”
Mary Lou
McDonald, president of Irish republican party Sinn Féin, told Sky News Sunday
that the U.K. can expect considerable backlash from the U.S., where politicians
“know that what is at play here is a very, very deliberate set of actions that
undermine the Good Friday Agreement.”
Will anyone
resign?
The last
time Britain took unilateral Brexit action, the government’s top law adviser
resigned, so watch for similarly dramatic moves from senior officials and
ministers as the U.K. again goes it alone.
Johnson’s
government is already in a restive mood after last week’s confidence vote in
the prime minister, with some Conservatives on the government payroll
reportedly wavering over whether or not to support Johnson.
Tory MPs
who oppose the bill are already circulating a briefing document setting out the
reasons why they intend to vote against it. The document, seen by PoliticsHome,
states that the bill is “damaging to everything the U.K. and Conservatives
stand for” and “breaks international law.”
Foreign
Office Minister Vicky Ford, Treasury Minister John Glen and Environment
Minister Jo Churchill, who opposed Brexit during the 2016 referendum campaign,
are seen as being on resignation-watch since last week's vote, according to the
Sun on Sunday. Hold on to your hats.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário