IMAGES BY OVOODOCORVO
15 things Vote Leave promised on Brexit — and
what it got
Some Leave voters may be disappointed.
BY EMILIO
CASALICCHIO
DECEMBER
24, 2020 9:40 PM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/15-things-uk-vote-leave-promised-on-brexit-and-what-it-got/
LONDON — It
was a long time coming, but the Brexit campaign can finally be judged on its
promises.
In 2016,
Vote Leave made a series of pledges, suggestions and assertions about what
would happen if Britain voted to quit the EU and negotiated a new relationship.
After the
Brexit process claimed two prime ministers, Vote Leave ended up running the
U.K. government. Its figurehead, Boris Johnson, is the prime minister. Its
mastermind, Dominic Cummings, was until this month his top adviser. Other
senior figures such as Michael Gove, Gisela Stuart and numerous MPs and aides
are now working in and around the Downing Street machine.
It means
the people who made the promises were the people tasked with delivering them.
And with the trade deal between the EU and U.K. now agreed, their record can be
tested.
1. Trade with the EU will be tariff-free and
involve minimal bureaucracy
The U.K.
has clinched a tariff-free, quota-free trade deal with the EU. But it comes
with numerous strings attached and significant bureaucracy.
There will
be new customs processes for haulers transporting goods between the U.K. and
EU, meaning extra paperwork and checks. Truckers will need import and export
declarations, security declarations and other paperwork for their shipments.
New infrastructure is being built at ports to deal with queues and to check
loads. There will also be new processes for trade across the Irish Sea, and
both sides will need to comply with "rules of origin" procedures that
will check where parts come from.
Meanwhile,
the U.K. has signed up to agreements to ensure neither side can undercut the
other — the so-called level playing field. On state aid, for example, there
will be a dispute settlement mechanism, and both sides will have the right to
slap tariffs on the other unilaterally to protect against unfair competition.
So the deal is tariff free for now.
Vote Leave
also promised that businesses that do not trade with the single market will not
need to follow single market rules. The finer details on that front will need
to be checked in the legal text, which is still to be published. But at the
very least, Northern Ireland will have to follow single market rules to ensure
its land border with Ireland will remain open.
2. Northern Ireland border 'absolutely unchanged'
On a visit
to Northern Ireland during the EU referendum, Boris Johnson said the border
would be “absolutely unchanged.”
He was
right that the Common Travel Area between Ireland and Northern Ireland would be
the same and that the land border would remain open.
But to make
sure that is possible, the border between Great Britain and Northern Ireland is
changing. There will be customs procedures for goods crossing the Irish Sea
because Northern Ireland will have access to the EU customs union while
remaining in the U.K. customs union.
That will
involve paperwork checks and border control posts (though not physically at the
border) to undertake physical checks on some plant and animal products.
3. End supremacy of EU law and the EU's Court of
Justice
Johnson
insisted at a press conference Thursday afternoon that the deal includes no
role for the Court of Justice of the EU. It will be worth waiting for the legal
text of the deal to be sure. But Northern Ireland will remain subject to EU
customs union and single market rules, which will be overseen by the Court of
Justice. So it would be wrong to suggest the entire U.K. will not be subject to
judgments from the court.
4. Take back control on immigration and asylum,
and cut migration to the tens of thousands
Downing
Street is implementing the points-based system that was long promised. It means
free movement with the EU is ending and citizens from the Continent will be
treated the same as others from around the world.
But it is
still unlikely that the U.K. will cut immigration to the tens of thousands, as
Gove promised Brexit would allow it to do.
The
government has also promised to take a harsher line on asylum as it will no
longer be bound by EU rules.
5. Britain will take back control of its
fisheries
Johnson
promised during the referendum campaign that Britain would "take back
control" of its waters. The pledge was vague, although others in the
broader Leave campaign, such as Nigel Farage and his Fishing for Leave group,
were clearer about the objectives, including the U.K. regaining "all
fisheries resources."
At the
start of the negotiations, Johnson said he wanted talks on EU fishing access to
U.K. waters to take place annually. Eventually it will, but there is a process
to get there.
It involves
a five-and-a-half-year transition, during which the EU will have full access,
but the quantity of fish the U.K. can take out of shared waters will increase.
Negotiations would be annual after that, and the EU will be able to retaliate
with tariffs if the U.K. refuses to grant it access. So it depends on the
definition of "control."
The
important detail is exactly how much more fish the U.K. will get to take out of
shared waters across 100 or so stocks.
Johnson
said Thursday that the amount of fish the U.K. can catch in its own waters will
be "rising substantially from roughly half today to closer to two-thirds
in five and a half years," after which it can be reassessed. One person
familiar with the detail said the U.K. would end up with a 25 percent share of
the current EU quota.
6. £350M for the NHS instead of being sent to
Brussels
Theresa May
did agree to increase the NHS budget by £20 billion a year by 2023, which she
claimed would mean a boost of £600 million a week in real terms by 2023-24.
But the
extra cash was not a “Brexit dividend” as she and Vote Leave claimed it would
be. The U.K. net contribution to the EU budget was more like £230 million a
week, but Britain has had to spend huge sums on the divorce bill and on
preparations for Brexit. So the NHS did get a funding boost but this isn't as a
result of the EU departure.
7. New trade deals, and access to a European
trading zone 'from Iceland to Russia'
The U.K.
has so far failed to sign a single brand new trade deal that it did not have as
part of EU membership. It has been negotiating with the U.S., Australia and New
Zealand and the government insists progress is going well.
It signed a
deal with Japan, which was largely based on the deal Japan has with the EU,
although the U.K. did negotiate some different terms. It has also signed a
number of rollover agreements the EU has with other nations.
The U.K.
can continue to negotiate with other nations and in time will no doubt agree
more trade deals, so the promises could be borne out.
During the
referendum campaign, Gove said the U.K. would "be part of a free trade
zone that extends from Iceland to the Russian border … we would have full
access to the European market but we would be free from EU regulation."
Whether or
not that has been achieved depends in part on the definition of "free
trade." The U.K. has agreed a tariff-free, quota-free deal, but the
customs barriers have increased, it is still subject to numerous EU conditions,
and there are still big gaps on services — for example, many business travelers
will need work visas.
Britain
still needs to lock in trading terms for EFTA states Iceland, Norway,
Liechtenstein and Switzerland, and complete a free trade agreement with Turkey.
8. Continue cooperating on security issues and
counter-terrorism
“I’m
absolutely confident this is a deal that protects our police cooperation,
protects our ability to catch criminals and to share intelligence across the
European continent in the way we have done for many years," Johnson said
Thursday. "I don’t think people should have fears on that score."
It will not
quite be the same though. Both sides will continue to cooperate on security and
counter-terrorism — but there is no doubt that cooperation has been weakened
compared with EU membership.
The most
important change is that the U.K. will no longer have direct, real-time access
to EU security databases, such as on passenger records, criminal records, DNA
and fingerprints. The deal allows for "ambitious and timely
arrangements" to share such data, according to an EU document.
The U.K.
will continue to observe the European Convention on Human Rights, and could see
law enforcement and judicial cooperation cut off if it fails to do so. It will
also have to adhere to strict data standards.
There will
be "cooperation" between Europol and Eurojust, but that will amount
to nothing more than what other third countries get when dealing with the EU.
However, in other areas, such as the extradition of criminals, the cooperation
will be closer than with third countries.
9. Financial protection for farmers who get cash
from Brussels
The
government will implement a new regime in the years to 2025 that will change
the rules for funding farmers in England. Cash will be tied not to the amount
of land, as in the EU system, but to whether that land is used for public good.
It is
unclear whether, in the long run, farmers stand to receive the same amount of
money as they do now, as Vote Leave promised.
10. Continued participation in EU science
research schemes, deeper cooperation on scientific collaboration, plus
increased funding for science
The U.K. is
retaining membership of the Horizon Europe program, under which EU states pool
funding for science projects. It will also continue to participate in the
Euratom Research and Training program, the Copernicus space program and others.
At his
press conference Thursday afternoon, Johnson said the U.K. wanted to be a
"collaborative science superpower." Britain has been boosting its
science funding, which is on course to increase to 2.4 percent of GDP by 2027.
More than £10 billion was allocated for research as part of the 2020 budget.
However,
the U.K. will not take part in the Erasmus scheme, the university exchange
program under which thousands of U.K. students attend EU institutions each
year. Johnson said it was too expensive and a net loss for Britain, but he said
a new scheme would be launched, named after Alan Turing, which will seek to
help students attend universities around the world.
11. Wages will be higher
Umm ...
come back to us in a few years to work out what happened on this. But even
government economic forecasters reckon a deal with the EU will hit U.K. GDP
compared with retaining membership. Some wages in some sectors might increase
(customs officials?) but others might even lose their jobs.
12. The union will be stronger
Gove argued
on the Andrew Marr show during the referendum: “If we vote to leave, then I
think the union will be stronger. Scottish nationalism has grown since we
entered the European Union. There wasn’t a Scottish Nationalist MP elected at
any general election when we were outside the EU.”
But in
recent months, repeated polls have shown that Scotland would vote for
independence if given another referendum, with Brexit a particular grievance
for Scottish National Party voters. The debate is turning to whether Johnson
will be able to hold off on granting one if the SNP wins big in Scottish
elections in 2021.
13. Cut VAT on energy bills to save the average
household £64 a year
EU rules do
mean that the U.K. is unable to cut VAT on energy bills below 5 percent.
Outside the EU it can. But Chancellor Rishi Sunak, who also backed Brexit, has
not announced that the government will make the change. The promise remains
outstanding.
14. Scrap VAT on sanitary products
The EU has
long insisted it will scrap VAT on sanitary products but is still yet to do so.
Sunak announced in his March budget that it would be scrapped in the U.K.
Johnson won
a concession from Brussels when he struck the Withdrawal Agreement that the
so-called “tampon tax” would not apply to Northern Ireland if it remains in the
customs union, which it will. So that's a checkpoint for Vote Leave.
15. The new treaty should be ready within two
years and before the next election (which was May 2020)
Well ...
the timescales Vote Leave set out in its campaign literature were ambitious,
especially with the benefit of hindsight. But no one knew then that Theresa May
would call an election and lose her House of Commons majority, which put the
brakes on progress.
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