FOREIGN
POLICY
Boris Johnson's Brexit maneuver risks blowback
from Biden, Democrats
The British government is willing to break the
Northern Ireland peace deal as part of ongoing Brexit negotiations,
jeopardizing hopes for a trade deal with the U.S.
By RYAN
HEATH
09/10/2020
04:30 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/09/10/boris-johnson-irelandbrexit-bombshell-410963
U.K. Prime
Minister Boris Johnson is trying to shake up the trade talks that are a part of
his country's Brexit negotiations. But the latest move by the Conservative
government could have the side effect of damaging relations with a new U.S.
president before he's even in the White House — and scupper the chances of a
U.S.-U.K. trade deal that Britain hopes to ink once it formally leaves the
European Union.
Johnson's
government is attempting to gain the upper hand amid a stalemate in
negotiations over the future trade relationship between an independent U.K. and
the EU, releasing a controversial Internal Market Bill Wednesday that proposes
transferring regulatory powers over some sectors from the EU back to various
levels of U.K. government. The proposal would go back on a prior agreement
reached with the EU on Brexit. Not only that, by changing how border checks are
conducted, the measure would break a protocol protecting the Good Friday peace
agreement of 1998 between Northern Ireland, which remains a part of the U.K.,
and the Republic of Ireland.
Northern
Ireland Deputy First Minister Michelle O'Neill tweeted Sunday that the planned
law would represent “a treacherous betrayal” inflicting “irreversible harm.”
Then-President
Bill Clinton helped broker the Good Friday Agreement, one of his signature
foreign policy accomplishments, which ended a decadeslong civil war between
those in Northern Ireland who remained loyal to Britain and those who wanted to
be part of independent Ireland. Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and
other party leaders in the U.S. have already signaled any move to upend the
Northern Ireland peace deal would seriously damage the "special
relationship" between the U.S. and U.K.
Antony
Blinken, a foreign policy adviser to Biden and a potential secretary of State
in a Biden administration, tweeted Tuesday that the former vice president “is
committed to preserving the hard-earned peace and stability in Northern
Ireland,” and that any changes to the EU-U.K relationship “must protect the Good
Friday Agreement and prevent the return of a hard border,” on the island of
Ireland.
Biden
himself has spoken often of his Irish roots and affinity for the nation,
describing a 2016 visit to Ireland as a “homecoming” and telling a Washington
audience that year that, "being Irish, without fear of contradiction, has
shaped my entire life."
Brookings
senior fellow Thomas Wright wrote last month that U.K. interference with the
Good Friday Agreement would “destroy hopes of a closer engagement with the
U.S.” if, in fact, Biden defeats President Donald Trump in November.
The move
also risks a backlash from Democrats in Congress, who have traditionally
courted Irish-American voters.
House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday ruled out a U.K. trade deal if London breaks
its Brexit pact with the EU over the Irish border. “The Good Friday Agreement
is the bedrock of peace in Northern Ireland,” Pelosi said. "If the U.K.
violates that international treaty and Brexit undermines the Good Friday
accord, there will be absolutely no chance of a U.S.-U.K. trade agreement
passing the Congress.”
“I urge
both sides to uphold the terms of this joint agreement, particularly with
respect to the treatment of Northern Ireland, in accordance with international
law,” Democratic Rep. Richard Neal, chair of the powerful House Ways and Means
Committee which oversees trade, said in a statement Tuesday.
Critics
both within the U.K. and outside it warn that Johnson’s move could also blunt
efforts by Britain and other democratic governments to pressure China to
protect democracy in Hong Kong, and increase pressure for another referendum on
Scottish independence from Britain.
Former
Finnish prime minister and veteran EU treaty negotiator Alexander Stubb told
POLITICO that the U.K. government is “putting ideology before reality,” calling
the move “unprecedented.” Brigid Laffan, a governance expert at the European
University Institute, went even further, calling the proposal a “hostile act
towards a near neighbor” that would make the U.K. a “rogue state” if
implemented.
Lisa Nandy,
the foreign policy spokesperson of the U.K.’s opposition Labour Party warned
Tuesday that any move to walk back the EU Withdrawal Agreement "undermines
our moral authority at a key moment" and "sends a clear signal the
U.K. no longer keeps its promises."
As Hong
Kong’s former colonial power, for example, Britain is a party to the
international agreement which ensures Hong Kong independence from direct rule
from Beijing until 2047. If London is willing to breach its international
commitments to the EU, that opens the way for Beijing to argue it is justified
in breaching its commitments to democracy in Hong Kong.
The
Internal Market Bill would also deliver a new balance of legal powers between
London and the governments of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. That’s a
point of contention among Scottish nationalists who are agitating for another
referendum on independence. Scotland First Minister Nicola Sturgeon — who
supports independence — described the draft law as “a full frontal assault on
devolution” in a tweet Wednesday morning.
Even
members of Boris Johnson’s ruling Conservative Party denounced the plan this
week, telling Parliament that it would undermine Britain’s reputation as a
country committed to rule of law. "How can the government reassure future
international partners that the U.K. can be trusted to abide by the legal
obligations of the agreements it signs?" asked Johnson’s predecessor,
Theresa May.
The British
government’s chief lawyer, Jonathan Jones, resigned in protest over the
proposal.
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Prime
Minister Boris Johnson’s government argues it is simply trying to advance
stalled trade negotiations with the EU, part of the four-year effort to unwind
Britain’s membership in the trade and economic bloc.
Northern
Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis, the U.K. minister in charge of the Good Friday
Agreement, admitted to Parliament, however, that the bill “does break
international law in a very specific and limited way,” by refusing to apply
certain EU laws in Northern Ireland.
Lewis’
admission drew immediate backlash from Brussels.
Charles
Michel, president of the European Council, which sets the bloc’s strategic
direction, said the U.K. Withdrawal Agreement has to be applied in full,
adding, “Breaking international law is not acceptable and does not create the
confidence we need to build our future relationship.” Bernd Lange, chair of the
European Parliament’s trade committee, called for a “moratorium” on trade
negotiations with the U.K.
Brexit
supporters have long framed the U.K.’s departure from the EU as a way to
increase the country’s economic independence. The stalled trade negotiations
aren’t yet delivering that independence. As David Frost, the U.K.’s chief
negotiator, wrote to Johnson on Monday night: “We need to see more realism from
the EU about our status as an independent country.” The U.K. will not allow
itself to be trapped as a “client state” of the EU, Frost vowed.
For
Johnson's government, the proposed law is a negotiating tactic. The U.K.
economy is just one-sixth of the size of the remaining 27 EU countries —
limiting its leverage in the current negotiations — and if it takes the threat
of breaking international law to compensate for Britain’s lack of negotiating heft
and change the negotiating dynamic, that’s a gamble the Johnson government
appears willing to take.
Graham
Lanktree contributed to this report.
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